Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Learning To Trust God

Now this series was birthed out of heart for those who are going through difficult situations or circumstances.  I’ve realized that there are many of us who are going through difficult times and are screaming out to Jesus saying, “Jesus I’m trying to trust you, I think I trust you, I hope I trust you, I want to trust you!”  And it’s not that Jesus has done anything to break their trust, but because of our own lives and upbringing we haven’t seen or experienced trust as it really is.  There have been situations in our past that have caused us to set up signs that say, “Don’t trust” or, “Watch out for people who want you to trust them”! Based on the book Ruthless Trust by Brennan Manning and scriptural backing, I have condensened some valuable points about trust into this document. 
One: "Trust is the result of the wedding of faith and hope." -Manning.  Faith arises from the personal experience of Jesus as Lord.  Hope is reliance on the promises of Jesus, accompanied by the expectation of fulfillment.  Faith in God comes from experiencing God and as we experience Him we trust Him!  Faith, born of this indispensable experience, infuses the felt knowledge of “the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom (God has) sent.”  Our trust in Jesus grows as we shift from making self-conscious efforts to be good to allowing ourselves to be loved as we are, not as we should be.  The Holy Spirit moves us from the head to the heart, from the intellectual cognition to experiential awareness.  In the midst of tragic events that leave us void of understanding, trust does not demand explanations but turns to the One who promised, “I will not leave you orphans” (John 14:18).  In the face of a pressing need for answers and solutions to life’s problems- answers that are not quickly forthcoming- trust in the Wisdom and Power who is Jesus Christ knows how to wait.  It reminds me of the great story of a missionary family home on furlough, staying at the lake house of a friend.  On the day in question, Dad was puttering in the boathouse.  Mom was in the kitchen, and the three children, ages four, seven, and twelve, were on the lawn.  Four-year-old Billy escaped his oldest sister’s watchful eye and wandered down to the wooden dock.  When the twelve-year-old screamed, Dad came running out.  Realizing what had happened, he dove into the murky depths. Frantically he felt for his son but twice, out of breath, he had to return to the surface. Filling his lungs once more, he dove down and found Billy clinging to a wooden pier several feet under. Prying the boy’s fingers loose, he bolted to the surface with Billy in his arms. Safely ashore, his father asked, “Billy, what were you doing down there?”  The little one replied, “Just waitin’ on you, Dad, just waitin’ on you.”  I believe this is a good depiction of how are relationship with God should be!  Young as he was, the boy no doubt had a history with his father- a history of felling safe, protected, accepted, and loved. He knew from experience that his father delighted in him.  Naturally the boy had a healthy, positive self-image.  He had come to know that he was loved, and he had felt knowledge of his father’s faithfulness.
            Two: Trust cannot be self-generated.  I am asked to pay attention to Jesus throughout my journey, remembering his kindness. (Ps. 103:2).  Screenwriter Woody Allen remarked that, “Ninety percent of life is just showing up. To trust someone is a gut feeling that he will show up in fair weather and foul, in good times and bad, in the yaw and pitch of the human struggle.”  Trust cannot be self-generated, it comes through paying attention to Jesus, and throughout our journey we will remember his trustworthiness.  Trusting someone does not imply that we have tested that person out thoroughly; proved infallibly that she is trustworthy.  Our trust is based not on proof but on an intuitive sense, an instinct, a feeling. 
            Three: Brennan Manning says, “Trust comes from some experience of the other person, an experience not reducible to proof.”  Most often, it grows up in a relationship of mutual love, one in which we have loved, and been loved by, the other.  Trust, grounded in faith and hope, reaches an unprecedented level in the experience of infinite love.  Do doubts and worries signal a rejection of God’s Kingdom?  Not necessarily.  There can be no faith without doubt, no hope without anxiety, and no trust without worry.  As long as we withhold internal consent to these varied faces of fear, they are no cause for alarm, because they are not voluntary.  When they threaten to consume us, we can overpower them with a simple and deliberate act of trust.  After the initial experience, perseverance in the life long quest for greater intimacy with Jesus, no matter how often we stumble and fall, is not only the antidote to hopelessness and despair, it is the sure path to divine certitude that overcomes all doubts, anxieties, and worries.  But sometimes we formulate plans to fulfill what we perceive to be the purpose of our lives, limited as they are, and when the locomotive of our longings get derailed we deem ourselves failures.  Our disappointments arise from presuming to know the outcome of a particular endeavor.  Here’s my point, God’s will first and foremost, is that we have a relationship with Him through His son, Jesus Christ.  That’s why we learn in Luke to not worry about tomorrow.  Be in the moment of today.  Lose yourself in God, and as you release the presumptions of what ought to be, and live in the present, you experience God in the now.  In these moments of being out of your daily time with the Lord, as you observe His presence and blessings in your life, you in turn experience the Lord, and out of experiencing God comes strengthened trust. 
            Human experience has taught me that there is no effective way to fight self-pity.  We can spiritualize heartbreak and camouflage our emotions but such denial of our humanity isn’t effective.  We are not spiritual robots but sensitive persons.  So ruthless trust is performing hidden, secret acts of kindness that no one will ever know about, confident that “your father who sees all that is done in secret will reward you”; it’s hanging on during your darkest nights when it seems there is an absence of God; it is the courageous confidence that despite suffering and evil, terrorism and domestic conflict, God’s plan in Jesus Christ cannot fail; it’s not self-initiated or self-supplied, but there is one abundant source of trust to which we must return to again and again.  And that is Jesus; it’s an unerring sense, way deep down, that beneath the surface of agitation, boredom, and insecurity of life, it’s going to be all right.  You will trust him to the degree that you know you are loved by him.  Ruthless trust ultimately comes down to this: faith in the person of Jesus and hope in his promise.  It’s starting each morning, on your knees saying, “Lord Jesus, I trust you; help my lack of trust.”  Avoid setting the Lord’s work as a priority over the Lord’s presence.  Know that only the total love for God can empower you to love rightly yourself and your neighbor.  It’s easy to trust those that you are close with!
1 Timothy 2: 3-4

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

GOD'S LOVE LANGUAGE



Now what are covenants?  Has anyone ever made one? Covenant literally means a pact, a contract, an agreed upon plan to which both parties subscribe.  Let me give you some examples of different covenants you can make.  Blood brothers are two close people who make a covenant by mixing their blood together. I think I remember attempting this once when I was young.  I don’t do well with blood or cuts, so I think I had a pushpin or something, and squeezed my finger so that just a small dot of blood came out. We’ve come to learn how unsanitary that is, but the principle act was in the belief that once you did it, and your blood was exchanged, you would be friends for life! What about marriages?  The secular view of a marriage is that it is a binding contract between husband and wife.  Christians believe it’s a binding commitment between themselves and God.  In marriage, how is the covenant created?  The two express interests, and they both have something the other wants.  There’s the exchange of something, a gift- rings, words- vows, and even a signed documentation of a commitment to one another.  “Hesed” in Hebrew and “Agape” in Greek is a love that says, “I will never leave you nor forsake you.”  When we enter into a covenant of marriage we change our last names.  We give people our last names, and we pass on our name.  Each participant takes the other's name on himself.  A person's name represents his individuality.  This exchange of names demonstrates a death to being an "individual."  Remember that a covenant is the union of two people.  In a covenant you are no longer concerned only with yourself.  Covenants, or binding agreements, are something we all encounter.  Whether getting your driver’s license, entering into a work agreement, or even a relationship. 

You may be asking, “Pastor Sean, God doesn’t exchange anything with me so why is this important?” Let me remind you that from the very beginning God has been a part of us.  Even today, right now, at this very moment, we do have something that reminds us that we are God’s creation.  Do you know what this thing is?  It’s our breath! Even in our living we have a part of God, and if you breathe deep enough you will even hear yourself breathe part of God’s name!  Each breath we take reminds us of our creator. When Jesus came and died for our sins he made a new covenant with us.  The New Covenant is God's commitment to give His people His Spirit so they can obey Him.  His law has not changed.  What God commits Himself to change is the human heart.  He will enable those entering the New Covenant with Him to willingly and wholeheartedly obey His laws.  Remember, God did not find a fault in His law under the terms of the Old Covenant.  See, in the Old Covenant the Israelites were to obey the Ten Commandments of the Lord and the Lord in turn would protect them and be their God for forever.  The fault was in the self-centered and rebellious thinking of the people.  God's law and way of life remain an integral part of the New Covenant.  The New Covenant requires a genuine change in the heart and mind that can be accomplished only through the transforming power of God's Spirit.  The Israelites, they wanted to serve God, but because of the condition of their heart they weren’t.  They couldn’t do it on their own, they couldn’t resist!  So God makes this new covenant with us where His Spirit empowers us to put to death the deeds of the body, the evil works of the flesh such as adultery, fornication, hatred, jealousy, anger and selfishness.  When we have God's Spirit dwelling in us, it enables us to have an attitude of enthusiasm, and from the heart, wanting to submit to God and follow His lead.  The major difference between the Old Covenant and the New Covenant is in the promises God makes.  The New Covenant is, in a sense, an expansion and renewal of the promises He made in the Old Covenant.  The greatest promise of the New Covenant is eternal life.  The Old Covenant made no provisions for people to receive eternal life.  However, under the New Covenant, "He who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit which dwells in you" Romans 8:11.  Having God's Spirit makes it possible for us to receive God's gift of eternal life.  The physical blessings of the Old Covenant, such as prosperity and protection, cannot compare with the far greater blessing of immortality available to us under the New. 


There are many of us who feel unloved, unwanted, and feel like there is no way a loving father can exist.  I want to tell you that Jesus came for you! In the Kingdom of God there is none unloved.  As we look into the word we see His love language, this covenant language to us used all throughout the Word!  Genesis 17:7, Hebrews 13:5, Ruth 4:7, Romans 6:23, Romans 8:11.  Covenant language is a love language from God to you!  And it is to remind you that you can trust a God who will never abandon you!  We will never be left alone, and we can never be rejected by God.    There are no longer any terms of the covenant.  They are unconditional.  The new covenant is a covenant of Grace! God can’t break it and you can’t earn it.  It’s freely given.  Do not “name” yourself anything less than God does.  You are His child!