Who Cares?

  Do you sometimes feel that the pace of life is racing out of control, that people just don’t have time for one another any more?  Me too.  While everything is going our way, the pace is not so threatening; but when we fall into one of life’s pitfalls, it is like sitting in the middle of a crowded highway in a stalled car.  No one seems willing to busy themselves with the rescue of the distressed.  A Who cares? attitude seems to prevail.

  Thankfully, according to the scriptures, we can rest assured that God Cares! Though the world is rapidly changing, He is “the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning. (James 1:17b)”   The Bible says that He sees us in the hopelessness of our most serious predicament and comes to our rescue.  What predicament would that be? …the Sin Predicament. “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God.” (Romans 3:23)”  And, “…the wages of sin is death. (Romans 6:23)”  “As it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one. (Romans 3:10)”

  Because of our sin, you and I have made ourselves the enemies of God, and because He is a just and holy God, our sinfulness has earned us eternal death and separation from Him.

  Now the good news: “But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. (Romans 5:8).”  Yes, God loves sinners!  He sent His Son, Jesus Christ, to purchase our forgiveness through His death on the cross.  Jesus rose from the dead proving that He had paid our sin debt in full, and, according to Hebrews 7:25, He  ascended back to Heaven to intercede for us as Savior and Lord.

  His deliverance requires, “repentance toward God, and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ. (Acts 20:21)”  “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved… (Acts 16:31)”  We must place our confidence in His promise to save.  No, this will not supernaturally take all of the bumps out of the road of life, but as a child of God you can always be assured that He is with you, that He has time to help, and that HE CARES.

The Tale Of A Tree

  We recently had to take down a few trees because they were starting to die or were leaning dangerously in the direction of our home.  Like most experiences of life, our unanticipated lumbering provided valuable lessons.

  First, one of the trees, perhaps over one hundred years old, appeared to be dying from the top down.  Of course the problem with the tree did not originate in the top—its issues of life were apparent down closer to its roots.  A few years ago, an ice storm had overwhelmed a large lower branch which in turn had broken off damaging the bark around a significant part of the tree’s circumference.  This injury affected the uptake of water and nourishment to the limbs above, and in time they were starved to death.

  Another tree seemed perfectly healthy, but was precariously leaning toward our house.  When the tree was sawn down, its heart, revealed by the dissecting of the chainsaw, had become possessed by a colony of ants who had made their home in its now pulpy center.  In a relatively short period of time, the tree would have fallen and greatly affected the lives of those of us who live so near.

  Similarly, our own lives can be grossly affected and visibly scarred by the unexpected and sometimes tragic happenings of yesteryear.  Truly, a part of us started to die when we were overwhelmed by a memorable storm.  And then there are those of us whose hearts have been invaded and are being consumed by unseen, parasitic pests that threaten the foundations and core of our very being.  They spawn an unmanageable, emotional terror.

  If you, like our trees, are threatened from within or without, you will be encouraged to know:  “God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. (Psalms 46:1)”  He says to those who love Him, “Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness. (Isaiah 41:10).  Perhaps you would like to get to know Him.  Just remember,  Jesus saith…, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me. (John 14:6).”

Our Only Hope

  …all seemed lost.  Many were already dead.  Dave was not expected to live more than a couple of hours. Angie had just taken a turn for the worse, and Kevin was even now descending the stairs to help them, sliding his hands over the handrail that was contaminated with the noxious compound that would soon be coursing through his veins, ebbing out the substance of life. There was only one hope, but would they discover it in time?

  This little paragraph describes a very serious event in sketchy terms that raise an abundance of questions:  Who are these people?  Where are they?  What is this horrid substance?  Where did it come from?  What is their only hope?  How much time do they have?  We need more information to process this situation and determine what can be done.

  Perhaps we Christians are guilty of drawing just such a sketchy picture of the plight of man with regard to God, sin, and eternity.  Everyone needs to know: God, the Creator of the universe, created man in His own image for His eternal fellowship, but man broke God’s law and severed the relationship.  Because of his sinful nature, there is nothing man can do to diminish his plight, even if he wanted to.

  But God, seeing the hopelessness of His fallen creatures, committed His own Son to pay the penalty accrued by sin.  Jesus came to earth and took on Himself the form of a man.  He lived a perfect life and died as the perfect sacrifice for the sins of mankind.  After three days, having paid in full the sin debt of every man, He rose victorious from the grave.  God ordained that “…repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations. Luke 25:47”  He said,  “That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. (Romans 10:9)”

  Salvation requires believing in things that you cannot see nor touch.  Satan would have you believe that faith is a gamble, but God says, “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. (Hebrews 11:1)”   Jesus Christ is both Lord and Savior; He is your only HOPE!

Thanksgiving

  If you were a historian and wanted to describe life on planet earth in the year 2022 for future generations, you would likely employ terms that are descriptive of the political, social, and economic movements that seem to define our times.  In recent years our political elites, in lieu of any constitutional awareness, have, perhaps unlawfully, flexed their legislative and judicial powers to turn our social lives into solitary confinement or familial cloisters.  Our economy was put on hold for a year and a half, so that full recovery is still in question as we await, precariously perched on the precipice of a crippling recession.  Sounds gloomy doesn’t it?

  But wait, all is not lost!  We have food and drink, our clothing seems sufficient, there are still roofs over our heads, the sun rose this morning, and we have a measure of health so that we can enjoy the love of friends and family.  For the moment we are warm, and the cool air outside is refreshing to our lungs.  You get the picture—we have much to be thankful for!

  So, who shall we thank?  Our contemporary leaders would like for us to thank them this Thanksgiving season.  They even have the gall to take credit for the simple pleasures of life.  But we know better; it is not them, nor is it ourselves that provide for our basic needs, and certainly not the niceties of life.  If you are honest with yourself, you will have to agree, “Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning. (James 1:17)”  Much to the annoyance of those who choose to overlook the obvious, there is a God who delights to involve Himself in the affairs of man. 

  I for one am resolved to ignore the commercialized hustle and bustle of this Thanksgiving season.  I refuse to give turkeys more attention than God.  I praise Him for His great love that afforded me eternal life in His presence through the gift of His own Son who paid the penalty for my sins.  He is my Heavenly Father, and He alone is all that I need.

 “Rejoice evermore. Pray without ceasing. In every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you. (1Thessalonians 5:16–18)”

The Big Picture

  According to the Bible, we all have a beginning of life, but no ending.  Every soul ever born into this world will live forever somewhere—some in the presence of God and others eternally separated from God.

  Though we never experienced it, every one of us believes that there was a world before our beginning; a world filled with people, places and things.  Some enjoy examining evidences of life on earth before their birth; we call them history buffs.  But since we cannot see, taste, touch, smell or hear anything that existed before us, most simply accept life today as the supreme evidence that there was life, time, space, energy and matter before us. 

  As for the present, we must engage in constant discovery to keep reality defined.  We grapple with things that are too small or too large to be detected by our senses.  Non-material things like invisible energy moving across the sky, undetectable gasses, invisible waves of sound and light, are barely comprehensible to most.  We simply believe elements of arguments produced by fallible experts who belong to the ever changing scientific community.

  When it comes to the future, again we cannot experience with our senses that which is not yet, and so we muse.  There are no old buildings or artifacts to uncover, no civilizations to unearth, no books written, no records to study. But, as in the past, we accept life today as the supreme evidence that there will be life, time, space, energy and matter beyond our feeble existence.

 For now, most of us purposefully and cautiously limit our perception of the whole. But, since it is obvious that there has always been more to life than meets the eye, perhaps we should carefully consider the realms that we cannot see or experience in the present.  Perhaps we need to venture a gaze into the distant past and into the future, at life, time, space, energy, matter  and more, as it existed then, or will exist—the Big Picture.

  That Big Picture will necessarily include God the Creator, it will include the eternal existence of spirit and matter.  It will include your eternal soul, either in the presence of God, or without.