Guest Preacher - Cambodian Superintendent Daniel Sar


 
 

Every so often, we will have a guest speaker at CrossView Church. We are so grateful for the gifted women and men that serve the Lord through teaching the word. This week we hear from Superintendent Daniel Sar. Supt. Daniel leads the Free Methodist work in the country of Cambodia. Dr. Darin Land will help facilitate a conversation with Supt. Daniel at CrossView on Sunday. You can watch the conversation above.

If you would like more information or if you would like to support the Free Methodist work in Asia you can visit: https://fmwm.org/asia/cambodia/.

Usually, when we have a guest speaker, we will not have a weekly devotion. We encourage you to watch the message again at some point throughout the week.

Blessings on you and your week.

Pastor Kyle


Hebrews: The Same Yesterday, Today, and Forever


This week’s devotional was written by Dr. Bryan Whitfield and is entitled, Commentary on Hebrews 13:1-8, 15-16. Dr. Whitfield is a Professor and the Chair of the Columbus Roberts Department of Religion at Mercer University. We hope you will be encouraged.


How do we go about living as Christians in a society where we find ourselves increasingly on the margins?

Our need to answer that question places us close to the original congregation that received this pastoral word of encouragement that we call Hebrews, for that group of believers struggled to hold on and hold out in the face of pressures from the broader society as well.1 In listening to the word addressed to them, we may also hear a word for ourselves.

The writer of Hebrews rounds out his sermon with a set of ethical teachings. These words form an interconnected series about how to live as a community of faith in an indifferent or even hostile world. They provide practices that set our community apart from its broader culture. To return to the image of the Christian life as a race (12:1), these words of exhortation function as marks of the trail. They keep us on the path and on our way to the goal.

The first mark, which forms the foundation for all the rest, is love. The writer focuses our attention in two directions. First, he points us to the love of fellow believers in community: “let mutual love continue” (13:1). Here the writer employs the word philadelphia, the Greek noun expressing the love between brothers and sisters. We are family, and we must continue to nurture and strengthen that bond if we are to find our way.

But love also has an external dimension. As we show love to our brothers and sisters, we do not wall ourselves off as members of a distinct tribe. We are also to show love to the stranger through the gift of hospitality (13:2). In the first century, hospitality was a practical virtue because inns were disreputable places. There were no Ramada Inns or Motel 6s. Though our circumstances are different, hospitality–paying attention to the stranger–remains a vital demonstration of love. We must become welcoming and inviting congregations. The writer reminds us that when we are hospitable, we too receive gifts because we may entertain “angels without knowing it” (13:2). Perhaps the writer was thinking about Abraham (Genesis 18) or Gideon (Judges 6) or Manoah (Judges 13). For all of these characters, hospitality led to new stories of good news, new possibililites, new life, and new avenues of service.

A second mark of the trail is to show care in times of distress. The writer mentions two crises in particular: those who are in prison and those who are being tortured (13:3). In both cases, the writer underscores the depth of compassion in its sense of suffering-with-others. Our life is a life in the body, and just as Jesus as our great high priest identifies with our tests and shares our vulnerability (2:14, 18; 4:15), so we should identify with those of our sisters and brothers.2

The third mark is fidelity: we should honor marriage, and we should be faithful to our marriage covenants. Such faithfulness sets us apart from the broader culture and strengthens the bonds of the community. Infidelity is not a private matter. It weakens the fabric of community, and those who are faithless bear responsibility for the wreckage their lack of steadfastness produces.

Contentment with what we have is the fourth mark of the trail (13:5). We do not greedily seek more to secure our lives. Rather we are to trust in God’s promises of presence and protection. Quoting first from Deuteronomy 31:6, 8 (see also Joshua 1:5), the writer reminds us that God will not leave us or forsake us (13:5). Yet, God is not simply present. As Psalms 118:6 demonstrates, God is our helper, so we need fear no human action or institution (13:6).

A fifth mark is loyalty and constancy. We should remember those who have spoken the word of God to us, for their faithfulness stands as an example for us (13:7). The ultimate example of faithfulness, of course, is Jesus (12:1-3), who “is the same yesterday and today and forever” (13:8).

The final mark is proper worship, and, in particular, proper sacrifice. That advice is no surprise, since worship has been central to this sermon. We are to make an offering of thanksgiving in response to the blessings we have received under the new covenant. First we are called to offer a sacrifice of praise as we confess Christ’s name. But acceptable sacrifice moves beyond the arena of worship and confession. As those who have received grace and trust in God’s provision, we are called to extend such grace toward others through doing good and by sharing what we have. We honor our generous God by living with open hands. We do not cling to our resources in order to secure our own lives in the face of an uncertain future. Instead, we share what we have as divine gifts entrusted to us as stewards of God’s bounty.3

This final mark, with its focus on acceptable worship, underscores the unity of all these admonitions. Having called us to give thanks and offer our acceptable worship to God (12:28), the writer now spells out the various dimensions of that worship.4  Acceptable worship does not find expression solely in ritual acts in the assembly or sanctuary. It infuses all of life. Thus in our love for each other or for strangers or in our care for those in crisis, we are worshipping God. In our sharing that reflects our trust in God rather than possessions, we are worshipping God. In our faithfulness to our covenants and to the example of those who have gone before us, we are worshipping God.

We embody this way of life, not on the basis of our guilt or in any effort to secure God’s favor, but because God’s grace transforms and empowers us. Jesus, whose constancy knows no end, has opened for us a new way to God so that we may approach God’s throne with confidence (10:19-22). In response, we offer both our praise and the witness of all of our lives with thanks and praise.



Hebrews: Looking To Jesus


This week’s devotional was written by J.D. Walt and is entitled From Functional Religion to Transcendent Faith. J.D. Walt is the Executive Director of Seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


ROMANS 12:14–16 (NIV)

Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse. Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn. Live in harmony with one another. Do not be proud, but be willing to associate with people of low position. Do not be conceited.

CONSIDER THIS

So Romans 12:1 contains the CTA for the whole letter (again, if not the whole Bible). CTA = Call to action. It is to “offer your bodies as a living sacrifice.” Romans 12:2 contains the cause of action, who is Jesus through the Holy Spirit, the very mercy of God himself. It’s why the text says, “but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” It sounds passive on first hearing. The point is to say Jesus is the actor here, not you and me. We do not transform ourselves. So many of us, present company included, have spent years trapped in what I call “functional religion”—trying harder and harder to do more and more to be better and better. It is a religion of striving after God. It is futile and frustrating and ultimately fruitless. It produces self-righteous so-called saints who measure their progress by comparing themselves to others. In other words, they lift themselves up by putting others down. We do not mean to do this, but until we get our eyes off of ourselves and onto Jesus we simply can’t help it. 

To “be transformed” is to move into the realm of what we call “transcendent faith.” This is the way by which the “righteousness of God” comes to us as a gift. Our only work is that of receiving. People tend to reject this because it feels like passivity, which we tend to despise. The operative term is not passivity but receptivity. This is where we are most broken—our ability to receive love—from God and from others. It is hard for us to be embraced just as we are because we refuse to embrace ourselves as such. It is far more comfortable to try to live in the broken paradigm of “believing and behaving.” The mystery of grace comes when we shift into the approach of “beholding and becoming.” We behold this miraculous vision of mercy, who is Jesus. He imparts to us the miracle of grace, and we mysteriously begin to become the mercy and grace of God ourselves. This is why grace is deemed amazing because it breaks through our brokenness and heals us. Many people have accepted a religious truth and considered it salvation. Fewer have actually received mercy and grace—who is the living, risen Jesus Christ. 

As the Scripture says, BEHOLD! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with that person, and they with me. (Rev. 3:20)

Many of us have heard the knock and said, “Come in.” We actually have to open the door. This is the shift from believing to beholding. It leads to the ongoing miracle of actually becoming like him whom we behold. This dear friends, is the good, pleasing, and perfect will of God. 

THE PRAYER

Abba Father! Thank you for mercy and grace, though I scarcely can even grasp the meaning. So thank you for Jesus, and that he has come to my door and that he stands there and knocks and keeps knocking. Thank you that though he hears my meager reply to “come in,” he waits for me to come to the door. I want to come to the door and swing it wide to Jesus. I know you aren’t looking for me to dosomething, but rather to open wide the door of my heart more than I have before; to let go of my former religion and enter into a real and ever deeper relationship. Come Holy Spirit and interpret this to my soul and lead me in this way of the will of God. Praying in Jesus’s name, amen. 

THE QUESTION

Are you seeing the difference between believing and beholding; between behaving and becoming? Are you sensing your heart drawn into the depths of who Jesus is and beyond what we are calling “functional religion”? Do you find your mind longing for transcendent faith? 


Hebrews: Passing On The Faith


This week’s devotional was written by Tommy Williams and is entitled 4 Ways To Pass Down Your Faith to Future Generations. Tommy Williams is a contributing writer to seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


A myth-busting, eye-opening study by Vern Bengtson and a team of researchers helps families and communities understand how faith is transmitted from one generation to the next. Families and Faith: How Religion is Passed Down Across Generations is the result of four decades of research, the largest ever study of religion and family across generations. The book presents excellent information and suggestions and also contains a joyful surprise about the author and researcher’s own faith journey.

I was drawn to this book for a couple of reasons. As a father I want to understand what has been the best model for teaching one’s faith to children and as a pastor I want to counsel our families to do the same. So when I saw this book listed in a magazine I read, I ordered it quickly and it did not disappoint.

The public narrative – and even the story told within congregations – is that the influence of parents in teaching the faith is waning; cultural forces are overwhelming the good intentions of mothers and fathers and challenging the faith formation ministries of our congregations. Underlying all of this angst is the sense that the faithful are losing the struggle and that these forces are more powerful than ever.  Bengston and the team from the University of Southern California discovered, however, that in fact, most adult children model the faith of their parents.

One very revealing and challenging insight is the importance of what the study calls “parental warmth” for the transmission of faith. Those children who remained in the faithful fold as adults had parents who were consistent, unconditionally supportive, and active role models of love, respect, and patience with their children and their faith development.

In particular the study revealed that those who remained a part of that faith as adults had a father who was “warmly pious” in his own faith during their growing years. This is not to say the father was necessarily verbose in his faith expression, or was overly sentimental.  Rather, the children experienced their father as faithful, and it was clear that his motives for prayer, generosity, mission and service were rooted in his faith, however vocal or quiet that father was.  Whatever the personal or emotional makeup of the father, each can communicate “warmth” about his faith. The cold, distant or inconsistent parent forebodes difficulty for faith transmission to the children in that household (186).

Obvious challenges then exist for homes with emotionally distant fathers, unhealthy ones, and for those homes where there is no father at all. Not surprisingly, divorce and interfaith marriage also present obstacles to the passing of a family’s faith from one generation to the next.  Another revealing insight from the study helps to address these challenges. Communities are vitally important to the faith being passed on. One imagines then that congregations must be aggressive and intentional about engaging mentoring programs within the congregation and outside of it. The challenge of absent, disinterested, or troubled fathers is not relegated to certain social or economic classes; this truth is present in the home of rich and poor alike, although social and economic struggles, of course, exacerbate them.

A further significant result of the study is the increasing or returned importance of grandparents and great grandparents in the transmission of faith. Because of their increased life expectancies and demographic changes in American society, Millenials and Generation Xers will have greater involvement with their grandparents, and for some, with their great grandparents, than any previous generation of grandchildren in American history (100).

So how can parents and faith communities have the best chance at fruitfully passing faith on to the next generations based on this study’s findings?

1) Focus on the quality of your own relationships

First, parents and fathers in particular need to focus most on the “nature and quality” of their relationship with their children as much or more than what they teach about the faith. This in itself fosters the faith overall.

2) Belong to a faith community

Second, faith communities “fill the gap” by promoting mentor programs inside and outside of the church that give children and youth a warm engagement with the faith that is authentic, patient and loving. Included in this must be an emphasis in engaging retired persons as their faith modeling has a significant impact.

3) Churches should focus on the family unit

Third, congregations should focus on the family unit, however its makeup, as central to the transmission of faith. Equipping parents to live authentically their faith in a genuine, warm way will transmit Christian faith to the children.

4) Take a long range view

Finally, take a long range view. According to the study, religious exploration should be welcomed in a diverse world. This might sound contradictory to the other results but the research showed that if a child has been given a firm foundation in the faith of the parents, they more often than not retain or return to that faith. Allowing the child to learn about others outside the faith should not be seen as threatening as long as the parents have humbly and warmly modeled their own faith.

Contrary to the popular narrative that “these kids today” are straying away at faster rates, don’t listen to their parents, and want to go it alone on spirituality, Bengston’s study reveals quite different results.

Oh, and about the author, something happened along the way toward finishing this project. On Easter Sunday just over three years ago, he wandered into a worship service. He was “surprised by joy” as C.S. Lewis famously said. “I came back,” Bengston proclaimed. These days he is in worship every week, singing in the choir, engaged in Bible study one day a week and a theology study group another night.  His own life is revealing another insight from his study of others – prodigals do often come back home to the faith of their youth.


Hebrews: Confident Hope


This week’s devotional was written by Ken Schenck and is entitled Believing God’s Promises. Ken Schenck is a New Testament scholar and a contributing writer to seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


Key Observation: The heroes of faith in Hebrews 11 were not able to receive the promise of atonement because only Jesus could bring it. They lived their whole lives with faith without receiving the promise.

Understanding the Word

The faith chapter of Hebrews 11 continues to tell of many other heroes of faith and situations where individuals from Israel’s history showed faith of various kinds. Abraham showed faith when he offered Isaac. He knew that Isaac was the child of promise, and yet here was Isaac facing his death. So the audience might face death, but God could bring back the dead.

Jacob and Joseph both saw promises that would come to pass long after their deaths, but they believed them anyway. So the audience of Hebrews needed to believe, whether Jesus saved them or not. Moses’ parents faced the threat of the king, but they disobeyed him all the same. So the Roman government might threaten the audience of Hebrews, but they should not fear but move forward in faithfulness.

Moses himself could have enjoyed “the fleeting pleasures of sin” (11:25). He could have enjoyed the opportunities of the world he could see. Instead, he chose to be mistreated as part of the people of God in order that he might receive a great reward later. He could see the invisible God with the eyes of faith, and that faith was the substance of things for which he hoped. By faith Moses crossed the Red Sea on dry ground. By faith the walls of Jericho fell. Sometimes faith brings victory in this present time and not only in the promised future. By faith Rahab picked the right side, and it was not the side of the people with whom she visibly lived at the time.

It is at this point that we reach the verses above. The author of Hebrews did not tell the individual stories but he listed a number of individuals whose stories of faith could certainly be told. Their stories differ from each other. God granted victory to some over their enemies. Gideon and Barak won. Jephthah and David won. Others did not win. Hebrews 11:35 may refer to a Jewish story about a mother and seven brothers, all of whom had the faith to die in the face of persecution because they believed in the resurrection.

What is very interesting is that Hebrews tells us that none of these actually received the promise in their lifetimes. That is to say, the promise of true cleansing and atonement would have to wait until Jesus Christ. They were not made “perfect” apart from Christ. They died in faith that God would resolve the problem of the world. God would one day solve the problem of the world, but it did not take place while these heroes were alive. They were waiting for the promise of Christ, a promise that had now come to pass. Now they could be perfected because Christ’s offering has been made. Now not only these heroes but the audience of Hebrews could be perfected. Indeed, we can be perfected if we will only continue in faith.

The faith chapter of Hebrews 11 is thus about endurance to the end even more than it is about believing what is not seen. It is about being willing to be sawed in half, as the tradition suggested happened to Isaiah. Sometimes God grants victory over our enemies, but our task is to have faith even if his will is different for us.

Questions for Reflection

  1. Are you prepared to live your life out in faith even if it is not God’s will
    to deliver you from trial and persecution?

  2. Sometimes we ourselves are not the target of persecution, but we have to decide whether we are going to stand with others who are. Are we prepared to stand with the oppressed, should the time come?

  3. There are always Christians-in-waiting watching us on the sidelines. How we react to hard times could be the difference between faith or no faith. Does that create any resolve in you?


Hebrews: In Tune With Hope


This week’s devotional was written by J.D. Walt and is entitled, On Letting Perseverance Finish Its Work. J. D Walt is the Executive Director of seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


JAMES 1:2-4 (NIV)

2 Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, 3 because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. 4 Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.

CONSIDER THIS

Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.

It is so clear isn’t it? Perseverance is not something we are doing. It I something that is being done within us. Perseverance is what Jesus through his Spirit is doing. To persevere is to participate with the Holy Spirit’s work to image us in the image of Jesus. The operative word is let. Oh how we need this kind of holy imagination in the face of a test or trial. Let perseverance finish its work . . . 

Can you “let perseverance finish its work?” In the deepest pit of despair can you muster the faith to mouth the words, “Jesus, I belong to you”? This trial is happening to you, but the work of Jesus is happening in you. Don’t fight the trial. Lean into Jesus. This trial can break you down. It can break you up. These are the conditions for Jesus to break in and to break through. And look what happens when perseverance finishes its work:

so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.

The Bible word is telios. It actually means perfect. It’s not perfect as in flawless and without error but perfect as in flourishing and fullness, and fullness as in the fullness of God. A trial, in the hands of Jesus, becomes the process of becoming empty of all that needed emptying out so that a new and mature and complete fullness could come in its wake. 

I sense I am talking to quite a number of people directly today. I sense I am talking to someone in particular who is contemplating ending your life today. We forbid it in Jesus name and break the curse of death over you and call forth the Resurrection Life and Power of Jesus to begin to fill you like a well. (You email me today and we will talk and pray together over the phone jd.walt@seedbed.com.)

To the man or woman reading this (when it becomes a book), sitting in a prison cell, thinking all is lost—be assured, perseverance is finishing its work in you. Jesus didn’t want this awful suffering for your life, but he is making you whole and mature and full—yes, perfect—through the suffering. Let perseverance finish its work. 

Be encouraged today. From this trial, though it be a testing of your faith, will come deep humility, profound authority, and breathtaking love. It is already happening. 

THE PRAYER

Father, we especially pray for the one who is thinking of taking their own life today. And we pray for the eyes to see and he ears to hear and the heart to turn to who that may be in our own context—especially the young among us—and love them extravagantly. Lord Jesus, we want to let perseverance finish its work in us. the Bible tells us you were made perfect through what you suffered and you were already perfect so we know you did that for us to show us what it looks like. You are THE ONE who perseveres for the joy set before you and we bless you to persevere in and through us today. Come Holy Spirit and make us mature, complete, and perfect—filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. IN Jesus name, Amen. 

THE QUESTION

How is perseverance finishing its work in you right about now? How is that going? What does it feel like? How are you understanding and interpreting it?   



Hebrews: Understanding Melchizedek


This week’s devotional is writen by Timothy Tennet, and is entitled, Abraham Meets the King-Priest Melchizedek. Dr. Tennet is the President of Asbury Theological Seminary. We hope this encourages your faith.


A key feature of Christ’s fulfillment of the Old Testament is that he would come and be the final high priest. This emerges in the book of Genesis in a rather unexpected way. Genesis 14 opens with the account of a regional conflict that pits five local kings against four other kings who oversee small areas of the region. The four kings defeated the five kings, who fled with all their men, allowing Kedorlaomer and his allies to capture everything—cattle, sheep, women, and children—anything and everything. In the ancient world these were considered the spoils of war since no soldier was paid for his service. You may recall that Abraham’s (Abram at this point in the story) nephew Lot had decided to live in Sodom (see Genesis 13), which was a notoriously wicked city. Sodom was one of the little kingdoms defeated in this conflict, so Kedorlaomer and his allies had captured Abraham’s nephew Lot and taken all of his belongings. Abraham heard that his nephew had been taken captive, so he took 318 of his best-trained men and set out on a hundred-mile pursuit and finally overtook them way up in the north. Abraham knew he didn’t have the forces to defeat them in a pitched battle, so he divided his men to attack them at night and routed them. The fleeing kings abandoned their spoils, and Abraham recaptured everything that had been taken. He returned home with his nephew Lot and his possessions, and all the captured slaves and livestock.

Melchizedek Enters the Scene

In Genesis 14:18 a very odd thing happens. It is so odd that the Jewish people ruminated over this for centuries. A man named Melchizedek, who was not a part of this conflict, comes to Abraham. There are six things about this encounter that were considered quite strange.

1. His name is Melchizedek, which means “king of righteousness,” or perhaps “one who worships or honors the king of the righteousness.” Who is this king of righteousness?

2. He is the king of Salem, which means “peace” and is an early reference to what would later be called Jerusalem.

3. He is both a king and a priest. In verse 18 he is called king of Salem and “priest of God Most High.” Israel would have kings and priests, but never in one person. The kings came from the line of Judah, but the priests from the line of Levi. This is very strange, indeed.

4. He emerges with no calling card or proper introduction. He just comes out of the blue. Everybody knows, even the people that have never actually read the Bible, that the Scriptures are full of genealogies, which tell how a certain person begat a person who begat another person, and so forth. Family lineages (who you are, who is your daddy, and where do you come from) were very important things in the ancient world. It was like your calling card. No one said, “Hello. My name is so-and-so.” Rather, they said, “Hello. My name is so-and-so, the son of so-and-so, the grandson of so-and-so, who was victorious in this or that battle, or who performed some great feat.” Everyone was connected. There was no personal identity or personal autonomy as it is known in the modern world. It is because of the absence of information about Melchizedek that the Jewish people speculated quite a bit about who he might have been. We don’t know who his father or mother was, nothing of his genealogy, either his ancestors or progeny, and we don’t even know how old he was.

5. He brings out bread and wine and blesses Abraham, not the other way around. Bread and wine are the primordial elements of life that would someday reemerge at the Passover and at the Eucharist. Melchizedek offered these gifts and this blessing by invoking the name of God Himself, El Elyon, a title that is used twenty-eight times in the Old Testament: “Blessed be Abram by [El Elyon] God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth. And praise be to [El Elyon] God Most High, who delivered your enemies into your hand” (vv. 19–20).

6. Abraham tithed 10 percent of all the spoils of war to Melchizedek. Genesis 14:20 records that “Abram gave him a tenth of everything.” It was customary to tithe 10 percent of the spoils to a king. The great patriarch Abraham, the fountainhead of monotheism and one of the most influential people in the history of the world, was tithing to this unknown priest-king named Melchizedek.

Biblical References Regarding a King-Priest

Psalm 110
The memory of this encounter stays with the Jewish people for a thousand years—all the way to the time of David. David, as you know, wrote many of the Psalms, several of which are known as coronation psalms (i.e., psalms to celebrate the coronation of a king). In Psalm 110, David seems to prophetically prefigure not merely his own son’s coronation, but also great David’s greater Son, the true messianic king who was to come and redeem Israel. Psalm 110 is a coronation psalm for a king, and yet it extols the figure as a “priest forever, in the order of Melchizedek” (v. 4). For a people who only knew of the order of Aaron and the Levitical priesthood, this meant that the prefigured Messiah would be both king and priest. David is aware that this is a major dilemma that must be resolved. How can the Messiah be both high king and high priest? Judah is the kingly line; Levi is the priestly line. The two lineages are separate, so how can the Messiah fulfill both? But David remembers the story of Melchizedek from millennia earlier. In Psalm 110, David hints at the solution by stating that there was a priesthood that was earlier than the tribe of Levi which dates back to Abraham, who is the great-grandfather of all the tribes. It is in Psalm 110 that we learn of the order of Melchizedek.

Zechariah 6
This hope appears again in Zechariah 6:9–15. There the Lord instructs Zechariah to take the high priest, whose name, amazingly, is the Hebrew name for Jesus—Joshua—and to declare that his name is the Branch and that he will rebuild the temple, the dwelling place of God, and will be clothed with majesty and sit on a throne. He will be a priest on the throne, bringing harmony between the two: the kingship and the priesthood. Again, in Israel, no one could ever be both a king and a priest. Abraham’s grandson Jacob had twelve sons who became the twelve tribes of Jacob—two of his sons were Judah and Levi. It was from Judah that the kings would come, and it was from Levi that God would raise up the priests. The sons of Levi and the sons of Judah were prohibited from intertribal marriage, so no one—even the Messiah it seemed, could become both a priest and a king.

Hebrews 7
Another thousand years go by and the writer of the book of Hebrews explains the whole thing with clarity. He is seeking to explain how Jesus can serve as the great high priest of the Christian faith even though he is from the tribe of Judah: “For it is clear that our Lord descended from Judah, and in regard to that tribe Moses said nothing about priests” (Heb. 7:14).

The book of Hebrews goes to great lengths to explain that there was an earlier priestly order that precedes and trumps the tribe of Levi—the order of Melchizedek! He then tells us all the ways this priesthood is superior to the Levitical priesthood. There are three main reasons.

The Superiority of Melchizedek’s Priesthood

First, it is a permanent priesthood. The text says, “You are a priest forever in the order of Melchizedek” (Heb. 7:17, emphasis mine). The Levitical priests always died and their priesthood expired and was passed on to someone else. But this priest, this messiah, was declared to be a priest forever, in the order of Melchizedek! This permanence is even sealed with a divine oath: “The Lord has sworn and will not change his mind: ‘You are a priest forever.’”

Second, Abraham tithed to him, not the other way around. According to Jewish law, everyone tithed to support the Levitical priesthood because the Levites were not given their own territory. But Abraham tithed to Melchizedek and since all of Abraham’s descendants are in his loins—in his body—then vicariously the entire tribe of Levi (Abraham’s great-grandson) was there, tithing in Abraham. The lesser always tithes to the greater, and so the whole Levitical priesthood, through Abraham, was tithing to the superior priesthood of Melchizedek.

Third, the priesthood of Melchizedek is greater than the Levitical priesthood because of the character of the two parties involved. The Levites were themselves sinners. They had to sacrifice for themselves before they could sacrifice for the sins of the people, just as ordained ministers receive Communion before they give it today. This is not merely symbolic solidarity, but the declaration that ministers and priests are also sinners. But Jesus was a priest without sin, and not because of some human ancestry or lineage, but because of the righteous indestructibility of his life!

Melchizedek is a type of Christ who demonstrates how Jesus Christ is both King and Priest. We have already celebrated how Christ is the second Adam, and here we see Christ as the Great High Priest. All the priests of the Old Testament were prefiguring this Great High Priest.

In Jesus Christ we have the complete fulfillment of the whole Jewish priesthood. Indeed, the whole priesthood prefigured the one true High Priest who was to come, Jesus Christ. In the old order, people had to confess their sins to a priest. But with Christ as our High Priest, we can boldly and directly enter into the glorious presence of God (Heb. 10:19–22). Jesus is the intermediary who stands in the gap and intercedes for us, representing us before God as our Great High Priest!



Hebrews: The Completed Work of Jesus


This week’s devotional is a video from a series called “Seven Minute Seminary” hosted by on Seedbed.com. This weeks video is entitled, What Is Atonement Doctrine? We hope this devotion encourages you this week.




Hebrews: Renewing A Commitment to Discipleship


This week’s devotional was written by Ken Schenck and is entitled, When It’s Time To Grow Up. Ken Schenck is a New Testament scholar and a contributing writer to seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


We have much to say about this, but it is hard to make it clear to you because you no longer try to understand. 12 In fact, though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you the elementary truths of God’s word all over again. You need milk, not solid food! 13 Anyone who lives on milk, being still an infant, is not acquainted with the teaching about righteousness. 14 But solid food is for the mature, who by constant use have trained themselves to distinguish good from evil. (Hebrews 5:11-14)

Understanding the Word

At this point, Hebrews interrupts its train of thought again to warn the church of its need to continue in faith. We have seen two of these interruptions so far. The first was at the beginning of chapter 2, after showing that Jesus was greater than the angels. The second was in Hebrews 3, after showing that Jesus was greater than Moses. Here, the author is in the middle of argument that Jesus is a greater priest than any earthly priest. Hebrews 5:11–6:8 is the strongest of all the warnings in this sermon. It seems significant that it is the mention of Jesus as High Priest that sparks this warning. Given the chapters that follow, it is very likely that one of the biggest reasons for the church’s doubt had to do with atonement. They just were not sure that Jesus had taken care of all their sins.

As we look back, it seems obvious that Jesus has taken care of our need for animal sacrifice. The Jewish temple has been gone for almost two thousand years. There has been no animal sacrifice among Jews for as many years. I have never seen an animal sacrifice and would have to travel to some obscure location in the world to find one. It is easy for me to believe that we need no temple or sacrifice any more.

But this was not the case at the time of the New Testament. The language in these verses is strong, even though the author will soften his tone in a moment. He was making a point in a strong, culturally appropriate way. It was appropriate rhetorically in the first century to overstate your case and move the audience in the right direction.

There is a little bit of shame in these words. The author told the audience that they should know better by then. They have been Christians for a long time. What was wrong with them? They should have been teaching such things by then. They should have known that they never needed to worry about atonement. Jesus had taken care of it. They did not need the temple in Jerusalem or the synagogue in town. Jesus paid it all.

Apart from these specifics, we learn from these verses that a Christian should grow spiritually over the years. Some Christians may struggle with certain temptations when they are young in faith. Some Christians may be troubled by lesser challenges when they first come to faith. But if we have been Christ-followers for a while, we should not still be struggling with the same temptations of our Christian infancy.

As we grow, we should be able to handle more significant challenges. And as we face them, we should find it easier and easier to overcome them. A pattern of complete surrender should become part of who we are. If twenty years later we are still where we were at first, then something is significantly wrong! In particular, we should be able to tell the difference between good and evil. We should be able to tell the difference between what is of the Holy Spirit and what is of the devil. It is not always the case, unfortunately

Questions for Reflection

  1. Have you grown since you first believed on Christ? Can you handle more opposition than at first? Is it easy to resist things that would have brought strong temptation before

  2. Can you see growth as a church over the years? Is there a core group of believers who have come for a long time and who collectively provide wisdom and strength for any challenge?

  3. Does the world outside your church see something different about your church that they don’t see in other places? Can they tell you are Christians by your love?



Hebrews: Guest Preacher - Mark Morrison


 
 

Every so often, we will have a guest speaker at CrossView Church. We are so grateful for the gifted women and men that serve the Lord through teaching the word. This week we hear from Pastor Mark Morrison. Pastor Mark serves as the director of Shepherd Ministries. You can find out more information about Shepherd Ministries here.

Usually, when we have a guest speaker, we will not have a weekly devotion. We encourage you to watch the message again at some point throughout the week and listen to the discussion podcast.

Blessings on you and your week.

Pastor Kyle


Hebrews: Finding Rest Today


This week’s devotional was written by Dr. Christopher A. Hall and is entitled, Redrawing the Image. Dr. Hall is a pastor, author, professor, and past president of Renovaré. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


Last week I mentioned that the expression ​“image of God” is a phrase that is given maddeningly little formal definition in Scripture. This is correct — except that when we examine the New Testament testimony, the Christological and incarnational focus of the ​“image of God” is striking. Let’s take a closer look.

Paul writes to the Corinthian Christians about ​“the glory of Christ, who is the image of God” (2 Cor. 4:4), and he tells the Colossians that it is Christ who ​“is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation” (Col. 1:15). Christ, the image of God, is the Word made flesh (John 1:14), ​“the only begotten God who is in the bosom of the Father” (John 1:18), the eternal Son who has created all things (Col. 1:16). The Letter to the Hebrews states that the Son ​“is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being, sustaining all things by his powerful word” (Heb. 1:3).

So, though the New Testament does not define what ​“image of God” means, when this phrase is used we are directed to Jesus Christ. To look closely at Jesus is to see at last what a real human being looks like.

This untarnished image of God, who represents God so perfectly that whoever has seen him ​“has seen the Father” (John 14:9), has come into the world to redeem us. And how has this redemption been accomplished?…[C]onsider how Athanasius explains Christ’s redeeming work:

“You know what happens when a portrait that has been painted on a panel becomes obliterated through external stains. The artist does not throw away the panel, but the subject of the panel has to come and sit for it again, and then the likeness is re-drawn on the same material. Even so was it with the All-holy Son of God. He, the image of the Father, came and dwelt in our midst, in order that He might renew mankind made after Himself.”

Athanasius’s metaphor is beautiful. If the seriousness of sin forbids a solution that is merely external and therefore superficial, here is a powerful account of the eternal Word taking on human nature precisely in order to make it new from the inside out. Other ancient Christian writers formulate this idea pithily in in terms of the famous principle, ​“Whatever is not assumed is not healed” — in other words, our diseased human nature is ​“healed” only when every aspect of it is taken on (“assumed”) by God the Son and is thereby united with the intensely personal Trinity. Then, when our lifeless nature is connected to the Source of infinite life, it is regenerated, raised, re-created, renewed, restored. It becomes again what it was meant to be, a genuine, authentic image of the living God, ready once again to know God himself.

Whatever was broken in the created image of God has now been restored by the incarnation of the eternal image of God. Human nature is remade, as God the Son united it to himself in order to make it new from the inside out (2 Cor. 5:17); our ignorance is overcome, as he lives a perfect life in order to show us what real humanity is (Heb. 4:15); our guilt is atoned for, as he dies a sinner’s death in order to cancel forever the charge that is against us (Col. 2:13 – 14); our corruption is healed, as he rises to life again in order to inaugurate a new humanity with a new nature for a new age, that all who are in Christ may walk in newness of life (Rom. 6:4). As if all this achievement of Christ were not enough, God the Spirit also is given, to inscribe the law on believers’ hearts (Heb. 10:15 – 16), to work inside us to draw us into the newness, the fullness, that is ours in Christ (John 16:13 – 15). Salvation is nothing less than full entrance into the life of Jesus by the Spirit.



Hebrews: A Shining Reflection


This week’s devotional was written by Ken Schenck and is entitled, Jesus Christ Is God’s Definitive Word. Ken Schenck is a New Testament scholar and a contributing writer to seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


Long ago God spoke to our ancestors in many and various ways by the prophets, 2 but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son, whom he appointed heir of all things, through whom he also created the worlds. (Hebrews 1:1–2 NRSV)

Key Observation: From the very moment God started to create to the moment that Christ will bring his eternal kingdom, Jesus is God’s last Word for the universe.

Understanding the Word

The book of Hebrews is in many ways one of the most puzzling books in the New Testament. We do not know who wrote it, and we are unsure of the church to which it was written. Experts on the book disagree on when it was written and whether its recipients were primarily Jewish or non-Jewish. Many think that its first twelve chapters were meant to be read as a sermon to a congregation the author hoped to visit in the near future.

The first chapter begins majestically, with an almost hymn-like contrast of Christ with the angels. Next to God himself, surely angels are the most exalted of God’s creations. Yet next to Christ, they are nothing. They are only servants in the kingdom of the universe. To show the glory of the age that Christ is inaugurating, Hebrews 1 shows us how much more glorious Jesus is than the angels, the stewards of the age that is now passing away.

The first two verses of Hebrews present a contrast. In the past, God spoke to his people in many different ways. He spoke to his people through human prophets in Israel. He spoke to them through angels. He led them through the wilderness with a pillar of fire and a wandering cloud.In days recent to the author, God had inaugurated a new Word: Jesus. He is not just one of many but the one Word. This final Word was the Son of God, the King to restore the rule of God on earth as it is in heaven. For centuries Israel had been without a king. They had hoped for God to give them full control of their land back.

In Jesus, they received a King greater than they could have possibly imagined. They received a people that was much bigger than those who had Jewish blood. They became part of a kingdom that was not only bigger than the land of Israel, not only bigger than the Roman Empire, but a kingdom that consisted of the whole universe, of all things both seen and unseen. The previous ways that God had spoken were “many and various.” Now God had spoken a singular, final Word in Jesus.

Jesus the Son spans the whole of history. On the one hand, he is the “heir of all things.” Everything that exists in the creation will be his when the kingdom fully comes. God has bequeathed it to him as his Son. In 1 Corinthians 15:26–27, we learn that God has destined everything in this world to be put under Christ’s feet, including death. So when Hebrews says that Jesus is the heir of everything, it truly means that Christ will rule over everything that God has made.

Then we learn that Jesus was actually at the beginning of the creation as well. This Son who is heir of everything was also the One through whom God created the worlds. Christians have long taken this statement to mean that Jesus must have existed before he came to earth as Christ. In fact, we believe that Jesus is God. In some mysterious way, even though there is only one God, God exists as three persons—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Hebrews 1:2 tells us that Christ was the agent of creation. Some Jewish writings from the time of the New Testament speak of God creating the world by means of his wisdom. An Old Testament example of this way of thinking is Proverbs 8:22–31, where God’s wisdom is pictured at his side helping him create the world.

Might the author of Hebrews have been hinting to this congregation that Jesus was God’s wisdom for the world, the One who gives meaning to everything? Jesus is the Word God spoke to heal the world.So begins this majestic sermon. Jesus is at the beginning and end of history. Jesus is God’s last Word for the universe. We know that we are about to hear God’s answer to all the world’s questions and problems. We are about to know the secret to the universe from the beginning to the end of time. That answer and that secret is Jesus Christ.

Questions for Reflection

1.Have you ever pondered the awesomeness of Christ? How great is this One who spans time from eternity past to eternity future! Are you living with an awe proper to his greatness?

2. How different would your community of faith look if Jesus were truly King? What is God calling you to do to make any needed changes?

3. Since Jesus is, in fact, God’s wisdom for the universe, should we not share that wisdom with as many people as we can? Are you excited to let God’s wisdom speak to everyone and every part of your own life?



Easter Sunday 2024: Our Future Hope Is Now A Present Reality


This week’s devotional was written by J.D. Walt and is entitled, Why The Resurrection Must Mean More. J. D Walt is the Executive Director of seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


JOHN 20:1-7 (NIV)

Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene went to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed from the entrance. So she came running to Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one Jesus loved, and said, “They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we don’t know where they have put him!”

So Peter and the other disciple started for the tomb. Both were running, but the other disciple outran Peter and reached the tomb first. He bent over and looked in at the strips of linen lying there but did not go in. Then Simon Peter came along behind him and went straight into the tomb. He saw the strips of linen lying there, as well as the cloth that had been wrapped around Jesus’ head. The cloth was still lying in its place, separate from the linen.

CONSIDER THIS

We miss the shocking surprise of the resurrection of Jesus because our hindsight will not allow us to linger in the stunning sting of his death. I mean, just when you thought things could not get any worse, they get worse.

We don’t commonly make this connection, but Easter actually began with more bad news. Mary Magdalene left her home in the darkness of Sunday morning to meet the dawn of a new day of grief. She found the tomb, but Jesus’ body was gone.

Where did we get the idea that Mary was going to the first Easter sunrise service? It never dawned on her (or anyone else) that Jesus was alive. Clearly someone had stolen his body. The ultimate insult now followed the ultimate injury.

For us, the resurrection of Jesus is like being in on the surprise of our surprise birthday party. It’s hard to be surprised when you know it is going to happen. There’s just no way to un-know it.

On the other hand, we have all lived through or are living in situations that keep getting worse. I’m trying to ask a question here I can hardly even understand. What if the resurrection of Jesus actually creates the possibility for an alternate reality just on the other side of any hopeless situation? We think we are on the way to the grief of a grave, but what if we are seeing the situation all wrong? What if the resurrection of Jesus doesn’t just defeat death; what if it reverses it? In other words, where sin and death once ruled, love and life would now reign. It would mean no situation or scenario would be too difficult for God—that nothing would be impossible.

The gospel must mean more than the indefinite extension of one’s life beyond one’s physical death. After all, death is more than the event at the end of your life. Death is the pervasive force of darkness that, as the poet says, sticks to everything.

In the resurrection of Jesus Christ, the power of the gospel has unleashed the reality of eternity from the future, restoring it to the present into the lives of all who will not just believe and walk over the line but who will live over the line—who won’t just be born again but who will grow up into this new life. This is the life Jesus came to reveal and now lives to release into all creation.

THE PRAYER

Abba Father, we thank you for your Son, Jesus, who has defeated death, not just the finality of the event of death but the very principality of death. Enlarge our understanding of his resurrection that we might not just hope for it but live into it. Come, Holy Spirit, and awaken us anew. We pray in Jesus’ name, amen.

THE QUESTIONS

1. How does the advantage of historical hindsight prove a disadvantage for us when approaching the tomb of Jesus?

2. What do you think? Is the gospel more than the indefinite extension of life beyond the grave? If so, what?

3. What does it mean that death, beyond just the event of death, is defeated? In your own life?



Palm Sunday 2024: A Triumph of Love


This week’s devotional was written by J.D. Walt and is entitled, Holy Misnomer, Batman. J. D Walt is the Executive Director of seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


ZECHARIAH 9:9

(No hymn tune for this scripture.)

Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! 
Shout in triumph, O daughter of Jerusalem! 
Behold, your king is coming to you; 
He is just and endowed with salvation, 
Humble, and mounted on a donkey,
Even on a colt, the foal of a donkey. (NASB)

CONSIDER THIS

Before we get too much further into Passion Week, I want to revisit what I consider to be a major misnomer we often find in our Bibles. Misnomer—it comes from a French word that means “to wrongly name.” Remember back a few days ago with me to Palm Sunday, and the day Jesus rode into Jerusalem “humble, and mounted on a donkey,” as the prophecy read.

Anyone remember the two words that appear in most of our (English) Bibles as the heading over this passage of Scripture? (See Matthew 21:1–17; Mark 11:1–11; Luke 19:28–40; John 12:12–19.) Here is the misnomer: “Triumphal Entry.”

These subheads, mind you, are not the Word of God. They are, rather, the work of translators. Likely, the translators were themselves playing with the irony. I will leave that to those smarter than I. Suffice it to say, though, this word triumphal is precisely the wrong word. Yes, it’s the word we want and like, but it’s wrong. Why not the “Humble Entry” or at least the “Prophetic Entry”?

Entries matter a lot. Just in case we entered this week with any notion of triumphal, as in “We Will Rock You” in our spirits, there’s still time to run back outside the gates and come in again. Crawl this time.

Passion Week is not our annual opportunity to put yet another exclamation point on our theological dogmas and doctrinal foundations. Passion Week is the annual invitation to become disoriented by the holy love of God, shaken to the core of our comfortable being, and dispossessed of our sentimental illusions about grace.

For all practical purposes, the best two-word caption I can think of for all that is about to unfold? “Hell Week.” The only one making a triumphal entry into Jerusalem was Satan himself. This is the week that the very gates of hell were opened, unleashing all hell on the Son of God. Remember that time in the desert when we were told that after unsuccessfully unseating Jesus with his tawdry temptations, “he left him until an opportune time” (Luke 4:13)?

This is that time.

Were you there when they crucified my Lord?
Were you there when they crucified my Lord?
O! Sometimes it causes me to tremble! tremble! tremble!
Were you there when they crucified my Lord?

Were you there when they nailed him to the cross?
Were you there when they nailed him to the cross?
O! Sometimes it causes me to tremble! tremble! tremble!
Were you there when they nailed him to the cross?



The Book of Acts: The End Is A New Beginning


This week’s devotional was written by J.D. Walt and is entitled, On Ending A Story That Never Ends. J. D Walt is the Executive Director of seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


ACTS 28:29-31 (NIV)

For two whole years Paul stayed there in his own rented house and welcomed all who came to see him. He proclaimed the kingdom of God and taught about the Lord Jesus Christ—with all boldness and without hindrance!

CONSIDER THIS

And just like that, the book ends.

My favorite thing about the Acts of the Apostles is the way it ends without ending. There’s no closing summary or conclusion; no credit reel, no salutations or prayer requests. It’s like Luke couldn’t land the plane so he just jumped off.

At the same time it’s probably the most fitting ending in the history of endings, because it’s a story that never ends. I mean, how do you end a story that never ends? You don’t end it. You join it.

Think about it. Every story will one day come to an end but one. The story of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, the story of salvation, the story of the Church, God’s own people, never ends.

This is what makes the gospel the gospel. By the sheer mercy of God we get to join the story that never ends. This is why, like Paul, we proclaim the Kingdom of God and teach about the Lord Jesus Christ. He is the only way into the never ending story, for Jew and Gentile alike.

The point of ending this way is to get us to turn the page and live the one life we have been given into the next chapter. This is our chance. Let us not waste our lives on any other story.

THE PRAYER

COME HOLY SPIRIT!

THE QUESTION

How is your Acts 29 story coming along?



The Book of Acts: Is Your God Too Small? - Special Guest Pastor David Hicks


 
 

Every so often, we will have a guest speaker at CrossView Church. We are so grateful for the gifted women and men who serve the Lord by teaching the word. This week, we hear from Pastor David Hicks. Pastor David recently retired from Pastoral ministry in the Free Methodist churches in the Pacific Northwest after 42 years. Pastor David has served in many capacities over his 42 years in ministry. He’s served as an Associate Pastor, Lead Pastor, Director of Pastoral Care and Spiritual Formation for the Pacific Northwest Conference, hospital chaplain, Interim Pastor, and the list goes on. Pastor David served as the Lead Pastor at CrossView Church from 2004-2008. We are honored to have him with us this morning.

When we have a guest speaker at CrossView, we will not have a weekly devotion. We encourage you to watch the message again sometime throughout the week.

Blessings on you and your week.

Pastor Kyle



The Book of Acts: The Power of God


This week’s devotional was written by J.D. Walt and is entitled, The Difference Between The Prosperity Gospel And The Gospel Of Prosperity J. D Walt is the Executive Director of seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


ACTS 19:17-20 (NIV)

When this became known to the Jews and Greeks living in Ephesus, they were all seized with fear, and the name of the Lord Jesus was held in high honor. Many of those who believed now came and openly confessed what they had done. A number who had practiced sorcery brought their scrolls together and burned them publicly. When they calculated the value of the scrolls, the total came to fifty thousand drachmas. In this way the word of the Lord spread widely and grew in power.

CONSIDER THIS

Previously on Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone . . . the seven sons of Sceva received a royal butt kicking when they tried invoking the name of Jesus as though it were some kind of spell.

The word of this “power encounter” got around quickly and scared the baJesus out of the Jews and Greeks in Ephesus. Note these Jews and Greeks were “believers” in Jesus. So why would they be afraid? Because they, too, were guilty of dabbling in these practices.

So what would the modern day equivalent look like? It would be easy to compare what they were doing to the Zodiac or reading books about your horoscope. I don’t think so. Here’s my take: I think these followers of Jesus were creating some first century version (maybe a distant cousin) of what we today might call the Word of Faith movement or the Prosperity Gospel.

If they operated within another religion entirely it might not be such a big deal. The trouble is they were using the name of Jesus in a way foreign to the person of Jesus. In my judgment, this is what prosperity theology does. Prosperity theology is a Christian religious doctrine that financial blessing is the will of God for Christians, and that faith, positive speech, and donations to Christian ministries will always increase one’s material wealth.

Bottom line: misusing the name of Jesus. Wasn’t there a major commandment about that?

The name of Jesus is powerful but it is not magic. The name of Jesus inspires awe and humble submission. After all, before it’s all said and done, every knee will bow to the name of Jesus.

That’s what happened that day in Ephesus. The Holy Spirit convicted them of “using” the name of Jesus for their own gain and brought them to a place of bowing to the name of Jesus. It led to a demonstrative repentance of burning entire libraries of books dedicated to these false religious practices.

Books that purport to be “Christian” but really aren’t pose far more danger than books about other religions or sorcery or anything else. In other words, it’s not Christianity’s competitors we need to be worried about but its counterfeits.

Beware of “using” the name of Jesus and those who make a living of it. It’s a thriving business with a flourishing economy, and it’s close enough to the real thing to be quite deceptive. (Did you pick up on how much money those books were worth in today’s text? 50,000 drachmas. That’s a days wages times 50,000 days or 137 years.)

To be sure, Jesus loves prosperity, but prosperity on his terms and in the way of his kingdom.

THE PRAYER

COME HOLY SPIRIT!


The Book of Acts: God Want To Be Known


This week’s devotional was written by J.D. Walt. J. D Walt is the Executive Director of seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


ACTS 17:11-15 (in context)

While Paul was waiting for them in Athens, he was greatly distressed to see that the city was full of idols. So he reasoned in the synagogue with both Jews and God-fearing Greeks, as well as in the marketplace day by day with those who happened to be there. A group of Epicurean and Stoic philosophers began to debate with him. Some of them asked, “What is this babbler trying to say?” Others remarked, “He seems to be advocating foreign gods.” They said this because Paul was preaching the good news about Jesus and the resurrection. Then they took him and brought him to a meeting of the Areopagus, where they said to him, “May we know what this new teaching is that you are presenting? You are bringing some strange ideas to our ears, and we would like to know what they mean.” (All the Athenians and the foreigners who lived there spent their time doing nothing but talking about and listening to the latest ideas.)

CONSIDER THIS

He was greatly distressed.

Did you get that in today’s text?

It’s what I appreciate about Paul’s approach in Athens. Despite being “greatly distressed” he did not resort to outrage. The gospel permits “great distress,” but it can rarely tolerate outrage, no matter how warranted. Anger will just not get it done.

Today’s world looks a lot more like Athens (with all its idols) than Jerusalem. We have two choices. Unleash our outrage over the loss of Jerusalem or embrace the challenges and possibilities of Athens.

While Paul was waiting for them in Athens, he was greatly distressed to see that the city was full of idols.

Lament offers a healthy outlet for our outrage: the presence of God. Remember the time Jesus said, “Happy are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.” I think this is in part what he was talking about.

We have a lot to be “greatly distressed” about, but great distress will never get it done. Only the creative, Holy Spirit empowered love of Jesus can.

To lament the loss of “Jerusalem” enables us to get on with the business of winning “Athens.”

THE PRAYER

COME HOLY SPIRIT!



The Book of Acts: Building Something New


This week’s devotional was written by J.D. Walt and is entitled The Word of the Day and of Eternity. J. D Walt is the Executive Director of seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


ROMANS 5:7–8 (NIV)

Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous person, though for a good person someone might possibly dare to die. But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.

CONSIDER THIS

We have heard a lot of big words in Romans so far. Today, we introduce a new word. So far in Romans, we have discussed the weighty concepts of sin and righteousness and faith and justification and mercy and peace and hope and circumcision and the heart and justice and judgment and law and atonement and repentance, and all of this is the stuff of the gospel. There is another word that brings all of these words together into the deep coherence of the gospel. That word, of course, is grace. But that is not the new word. 

As I look over the list of terms it occurs to me they are all somewhat abstract concepts. They all mean something and yet their meanings all together point beyond themselves. In other words, they are describing something larger. Even this word bringing coherence to them all—grace—points beyond itself. They are all nice words, even powerful words, with strong meanings and yet they remain abstractions; until we read this:

But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.

Amazing grace can only come from one place: amazing love. 

As our fight song has it, “He left his Father’s throne above, so free so infinite his grace, emptied Himself of all but love, and bled for Adam’s helpless race.”

The word is love. Though we have hardly seen it to date, we will begin to see it everywhere in Romans. 

Paul refers to the gospel as the “power of God” precisely because the gospel is the love of God. It is why I maintain that rather than the conventional nomenclature of “the gospel of Jesus Christ,” it should read, “The gospel is Jesus Christ.”

But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.

Love is the question and the answer. It is the rule and the reason. The love of God in Jesus Christ is not only the grace that saves us but it is the very life of God in us that makes us agents of salvation for others. The apostle John will later capture the logic of love in these words:

“This is how we know what love is—Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers and sisters” (1 John 3:16).  

But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.

Grace is an idea. Love can only be a person. Indeed, grace is the big idea of God, but love is his nature and his name. 

Yes, “Amazing love how can it be, that thou my God wouldst die for me.” 

But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.

THE PRAYER

Our Father in heaven, thank you for sending your Son to this earth to die for us; even for me. I understand this to the point where I can accept it in my understanding and yet I hardly grasp it. I want to break free into a new level—not of grasping for you but of being grasped by you. Something tells me this will come down to my own willingness to receive and be loved. Something in me doesn’t want it to be about love, but about power or justice or sovereignty or something that feels more weighty to me. Forgive me for this. I think it begins by being honest; so that is my honesty today. I believe my knowledge about you keeps me at a safe distance. I am ready to trade this in for the real knowing and being known by you. I am ready to personally receive the demonstration of love who is Jesus. Praying in his name, amen. 

THE QUESTION

Do you want it to be about something other than love? Why? Does love feel soft and flimsy to you or has it come into the category of the eternal weight of glory; of ultimate durability and final substance? 


The Book of Acts: The Importance of Prayer


This week’s devotional was written by J.D. Walt and is entitled The Comprehensive and Confounding Mystery of Prayer and Fatih. J. D Walt is the Executive Director of seedbed.com. We hope this devotion encourages you this week.


ACTS 12:16–19A (NIV)

But Peter kept on knocking, and when they opened the door and saw him, they were astonished. Peter motioned with his hand for them to be quiet and described how the Lord had brought him out of prison. “Tell James and the other brothers and sisters about this,” he said, and then he left for another place.

In the morning, there was no small commotion among the soldiers as to what had become of Peter. After Herod had a thorough search made for him and did not find him,

CONSIDER THIS

Today we continue our foray into the comprehensive yet confounding mysteries of prayer and intercession.

James dies by Herod’s sword. Peter is delivered by the saints’ prayers. Something tells me no matter how many times they celebrate Peter’s deliverance, they will have a very hard time getting over James’s death. 

Three things we want to avoid when our prayers aren’t answered according to our expectations:

  1. We don’t blame God.

  2. We don’t blame the effectiveness of our prayers.

  3. We don’t blame the efficacy of the faith of those for whom we are praying.

So what do we do? We blame the battlefield. We blame the fog of war. We blame the chaotic, broken, fallen order of the corrupted creation. And we keep praying, pressing on with an ever-clarified understanding of our challenging reality on this side of the new creation. Here’s the bottom line for those who persist in prayer:

  1. We will win many battles.

  2. We will lose some very difficult battles and suffer devastating losses.

  3. We will most often be left to wonder why some of our prayers are answered according to our expectations and others are not. 

I find it interesting how our apostolic storyteller, Dr. Luke, tells two Jesus stories in his Gospel account no other Gospel author includes. These two stories are respectively known as, “The Friend at Midnight,” and “The Widow and the Unjust Judge.” Both are stories of the need to persevere in prayer. 

Then Jesus said to them, “Suppose you have a friend, and you go to him at midnight and say, ‘Friend, lend me three loaves of bread; a friend of mine on a journey has come to me, and I have no food to offer him.’ And suppose the one inside answers, ‘Don’t bother me. The door is already locked, and my children and I are in bed. I can’t get up and give you anything.’ I tell you, even though he will not get up and give you the bread because of friendship, yet because of your shameless audacity he will surely get up and give you as much as you need. (Luke 11:5–8)

My take: A lot of times when you are praying into a desperate situation it is going to feel like no one is home and no one cares. That is not true. Your feelings will deceive you. Your faith must lead you. Desperation keeps asking. Determination keeps seeking. Dogged audacity keeps knocking. God has created a realm for divine-human collaboration. It is called, “Prayer and Faith.” On the one hand, prayer is so simple a child can grasp it. On the other hand, prayer is so complex and sophisticated a seasoned saint can’t fully comprehend it. Maybe this is why it takes two hands and why we often fold our two hands together when we pray. 

Then Jesus told his disciples a parable to show them that they should always pray and not give up. He said: “In a certain town there was a judge who neither feared God nor cared what people thought. And there was a widow in that town who kept coming to him with the plea, ‘Grant me justice against my adversary.’

“For some time he refused. But finally he said to himself, ‘Even though I don’t fear God or care what people think, yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will see that she gets justice, so that she won’t eventually come and attack me!’” (Luke 18:1–5)

My take: Jesus draws stark contrast here as though to say, “God is nothing like that judge and you are nothing like that widow. God is the judge all right, but he’s your good Father. You are not a helpless widow but an empowered beloved son or daughter with full standing and profound authority. Still, in difficult seasons it will feel like God doesn’t care and you have no power. Don’t trust that feeling. Lean into faith. Wake up. Rise up. Kneel down. Never give up. Never give in. Never give way.”  

And the Lord said, “Listen to what the unjust judge says. And will not God bring about justice for his chosen ones, who cry out to him day and night? Will he keep putting them off? I tell you, he will see that they get justice, and quickly. However, when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on the earth?”  (Luke 18:6–8)

Did you catch the three-word call to action in these last verses? 

 . . . day and night 

It’s one of the lesser-emphasized things I love about this story. All of it happened in the middle of the night. Peter was awakened from a deep sleep by the angel. But guess who wasn’t sleeping? The church. “Many people,” the Scripture tells us, had gathered at the home of Mary (mother of John) to set up shop as a house of prayer for Peter. As they incessantly knocked on the doors of Heaven the doors of the prison sprung open, and deep in the darkness of the midnight hour, guess who showed up knocking on their door? 

But Peter kept on knocking, and when they opened the door and saw him, they were astonished. 

THE PRAYER OF TRANSFORMATION

Lord Jesus, I am your witness. 

I receive your righteousness and release my sinfulness.
I receive your wholeness and release my brokenness.
I receive your fullness and release my emptiness.
I receive your peace and release my anxiety.
I receive your joy and release my despair.
I receive your healing and release my sickness. 
I receive your love and release my selfishness. 

Come, Holy Spirit, transform my heart, mind, soul, and strength so that my consecration becomes your demonstration; that our lives become your sanctuary. For the glory of God our Father, amen.

THE QUESTION

How do these two Jesus stories from Dr. Luke—the friend at midnight and the widow and the unjust judge—encourage your heart, strengthen your mind, and embolden your faith when it comes to prayer, the battlefield, and the comprehensive, confounding mystery of it all? Journal that out today.