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Seeking Jesus with Faith

By Ryan Kelly –

There are so many men and women in our nation that are seeking the Lord. Although all are at different points in their growth, those that are seeking salvation through Jesus will find it. But, it takes faith. 

“And without faith it is impossible to please him, for whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who seek him.” Hebrews 11:6

Jesus tells us that faith as small as a grain of a mustard seed moves mountains, so never think that you are not good enough or incapable of seeing God. We can all see God and are all loved by Him. 

For the non-believer – if you seek Him with your whole heart, you will find Him because God is real and is active in your life. 

For the believer, we must all continue to draw close to God and seek a closer relationship with Him, as this is the only way to grow as Christian brothers and sisters.

Remember that seeking God and having faith in God go hand in hand. Have the faith of a child and seek your Father. He will not let you down. 

This Week’s Thought

By Brad Campbell –

Just a thought to help start your week. 

This beautiful southern plantation mansion sits just a few miles south of the heart of Nashville, Tennessee, in the town of Franklin.  Quiet, peaceful, and beautiful are just a few things that come to mind when you look at this picture.  However, it wasn’t always the case there.  This home, built in 1826, sat very near one of the Civil War’s terrible battles and as a result became a hospital for the wounded and dying.  At one point, the bodies of four dead Confederate generals lay stretched out on the back porch.

Every home, beautiful on the outside or not, has issues.  The world may not know that relationships and hearts lay dying on the inside.  But God knows all.

As you face a new week ahead, open your home to the sick and dying of this world.  Maybe you cannot physically do that, but you can certainly prayerfully take on that challenge.  As you meet with the Lord each day, pray earnestly for neighbors and friends who are dealing with terrible battles of their own (known to you or not).  Each war brings casualties.  But, a prayerful relationship with the Lord above will make all the difference to a once-dying soul who needs to know the Great Physician by name.  Fight on.

Just a thought.

Washed Clean

Trust is not what you can see or touch, but belief in the promises of God. Trust is what the disciples had when Jesus was being nailed to the cross for the punishment of our sin. They had faith that Jesus was the Son of God, and we know from the words of Jesus that even faith as small as the grain of a mustard seed can move mountains.

Jesus died, and their faith and trust was tested like never before.  But after three days, their faith and trust was realized with the impossible resurrection of Jesus.  Jesus conquered sin and death for all that believe and trust in Him. This promise was, and is, and will be for all.

This is the celebration of Easter, and it is what unites us all as believers. We may have disagreements and differences in some ways, but what unites us all is the complete faith and trust in Jesus as our Savior. So let’s stand hand in hand as brothers and sisters in Christ and celebrate the wonderful news that each of us that trust in Jesus will be washed clean – as white as snow.

Hallelujah to the risen Savior!

This Week’s Thought

By Brad Campbell –

Just a thought to help start your week.

My youngest daughter and I took a road trip to Nashville, TN, a couple of weeks ago.  Nashville, the home of country music, is a favorite of each of my girls.  We did some exploring, took in the Country Music Hall of Fame and the famed Ernest Tubb Record Shop. 

As we walked along the Cumberland River downtown, we stopped to admire the beauty of the place, which you can see in the trees pictured here.  Just mere feet away from us were seemingly mobs of people bustling about in anticipation of many ongoing activities, traffic in every lane and going in every direction, and oh the noise.  And yet, even in the midst of all that, was the beauty of God’s creation.

As you enter the hustle and bustle of your week, perhaps full of mobs of people, lots of traffic, or maybe too much noise, take time – if even just a moment – to see the beauty of God’s creation right there beside you.

And if you don’t SEE the beauty, then BE the beauty.  The world needs it!  And oh, what a difference it can make. 

Just a thought…

This Week’s Thought

By Brad Campbell –

Just a thought to help start your week. 

Who doesn’t like a good celebration?  Perhaps I should clarify a little.  I realize many so-called celebrations include several not-so-wise decisions and questionable activities, but I’m speaking here about good wholesome fun celebrations.  It might be for a birthday, marriage, retirement, or any number of other reasons.

My photo here is of one such very large celebration we were a part of at Walt Disney World a few short years ago.  There were lots of songs, fireworks, and people which made for an amazing show.

The Bible even speaks of celebrations, especially the kind that take place in Heaven when a person comes to know the Lord as their own personal savior.  Imagine the biggest, most elaborate celebration you can think of.  Now understand that the grandest of all those celebrations here on this earth are absolutely nothing to compare with a Heavenly celebration!!

It’s time for a party!  Introduce someone to Jesus this week!  Let’s celebrate together!

Just a thought.

This Week’s Thought

By Brad Campbell –

Just a thought to help start your wee 

I have things that should be labeled.  Not just so that I know what and where they came from, but so my children will later, too.  You probably cannot read the label in this picture, but this is an old paper label glued to the bottom of a very old clothes iron that belonged to my wife’s grandmother.  On the label, she wrote, “This iron was used for 20 years,” and she signed her name.  She wanted someone later to know this information, and we are glad she did.

What if we had labels?  What if someone had marked us to identify us for the next generation and given some indication of how and for how long we were useful? 

Well, as a Christian, we do have a label.  And it is the name of Christ.  We belong to Him.

We are to be useful to Him.  Our specified duration of usefulness is not up to us, and we have no right to decide when we are done.  Only God decides when He is finished with our time here, and then He will choose to take us home.  If you are still here, then you have a purpose, and you are useful to Him.

Wear your Christian label well – not with pride, but with humbleness for the One Who gave us His label.

Just a thought.

What Does Denying Yourself Really Mean?

By Ryan Kelly –

A powerful verse in Scripture is Mathew 16:24, “Anyone who wants to be my disciple must deny themselves, take up their cross, and follow me daily.” Jesus tells us how to follow Him and achieve everlasting life, but what does it really mean to deny ourselves?

I have struggled with this throughout my life, and still feel the pull between self-sacrifice and enjoying the blessings that God has bestowed on me. On one hand, God tells us to enjoy the world that He has created and our relationship with Him. He has created a beautiful and majestic world just for us. On the other hand, as Christians we feel compelled to spread the gospel throughout the world and to work hard for our Savior.

So which is it?

The answer is both. We are indeed to sacrifice when needed, and to be willing to sacrifice everything important to us (see Jesus’ conversation with the rich young ruler). But, the willingness to sacrifice does not mean that He wants you to sacrifice everything right now.

We are each on a path designed specifically for us by God. And, He speaks to each of us daily. When we listen to Him, we hear Him guiding and directing us each in individual ways. When He tells us to deny ourselves, it’s always for good reason. Most of the time it is to reject the sinful world around us and to lean on Him. Sometimes sacrifice deals less with us and more of what He is doing in the lives of others. Either way, we should listen.

It is equally important, though, that we enjoy the world that He made for us. Enjoy your spouse, your kids, nature, fun, food, excitement and humor. These things are made specifically for us, and it does a disservice to God when we refuse them. Obviously there are limits to this notion as there is with anything, but it’s important for us to remember that following Jesus does not mean that we cannot enjoy life.

It is possible to work and play all within the will of God. Keep working to find that elusive perfect balance of life.

Healing Awaits: Compelling Testimony from Reverend Anthony Thompson from Charleston

By Kevin Dougherty –

In conjunction with three other downtown Charleston, South Carolina churches, my home church, First Baptist, is participating in a Lenten series focusing on God’s forgiveness and grace. The series has drawn heavily on the powerful witness of the response of Emanuel A. M. E. Church and the broader Charleston community to the murder of nine worshippers at Emanuel on June 17, 2015. One of those victims was Myra Thompson, and her husband, Reverend Anthony Thompson, was the speaker at the service last Wednesday. He offered an encouraging, uplifting, and almost superhuman testimony of grace, hope, love, and most of all, healing.

Reverend Thompson originally had no interest in attending the bond hearing of his wife’s murderer, Dylan Roof, but his children wanted to go so he acquiesced. He was adamant with them though that they were not going to say a word. As the hearing proceeded, Thompson told us how he found himself checking his watch and asking God to hurry things up. Then he said God whispered in his ear and Thompson knew what he had to do. God had told him he needed to forgive Roof. He needed to make sure Roof knew he had to confess and repent of his sin and give his heart to Jesus. At the bond hearing, Thompson told Roof, “We would like you to take this opportunity to repent. Repent. Confess. Give your life to the one who matters the most, Christ, so that He can change it, can change your ways.”

Reverend Thompson’s was one of the voices of calm, forgiveness, grace, and love that set an example for the world and did much to save Charleston from catastrophe, but what Thompson talked about Wednesday was not so much that as it was the sense of healing that he immediately felt after being obedient to God. He said his heart immediately became as light as a feather and he was filled with God’s peace and love. He described how God took away all the anger and hate and gave him freedom and peace. He said he’s had that peace ever since and that it just gets better every day. He knows God is in control, that God has prepared a place for his wife, and that God now has him on a mission to tell others what we can receive from forgiveness.

Reverend Thompson began this message by telling us that before we can tap into the healing power of forgiveness, we must first understand who we are in the eyes of God. None of us are righteous. All of us are sinners. We must first accept these facts about ourselves before we can understand forgiveness. We too need to be forgiven, and if we want God to forgive us, we must forgive others.

Reverend Thompson told the story of how as a young boy he had shot and killed his grandmother’s cat with a sling shot. His sister had witnessed the deed and was using it as leverage to get Reverend Thompson to do certain things she wanted. The guilt and the dread and the power his sister now had over him built up in Thompson until he was compelled to confess to his grandmother. When he did, she told him she already knew. She had seen the whole thing from her window. She had already forgiven him. She loved him. Reverend Thompson reminded us that God is also standing at a window and sees all our sins. He still loves us and He forgives us.

Reverend Thompson told us of the release he felt from being forgiven by his grandmother. It healed him from the misery he was feeling.   Such healing he said, is made possible only by Jesus, reminding us that it is by His stripes we are healed (Isaiah 53:5). Jesus’ sacrifice made it possible for all of us sinners to come together and be healed. Sin, Thompson said, is the disease. Forgiveness is the cure. The more we hold on to anger, the more miserable we will become. The more we hold on to a grudge, the more we hurt ourselves. Only forgiveness can unlock the healing. Thompson said he knew this, “because I had to do that.”

Sometime after the Emanuel murders, Reverend Thompson was speaking at a predominantly white church and a white woman about his age approached him and confessed that she had been taught racism growing up. She said that at some point she realized it was wrong, but that she couldn’t bear to change because of her social place. When she heard about the Emanuel families forgiving Roof, she was moved to step out in faith and ask God to forgive her. Reverend Thompson said he considered the woman to have done a very courageous thing. He confessed that he “used to be a racist too.” “We did it to each other, didn’t we?,” he asked. But then he reminded us that that does not have to be the way it is any more. Hate divides, but forgiveness unites. He described forgiveness as serving the same purpose as a band-aid that pulls together torn pieces of skin to allow healing. Then he listed several torn relationships that might need forgiveness—parents and children, husbands and wives, community members—and asked us “what are you going to do?”

Most of us are not asked to forgive a sin as horrific as what Reverend Thompson forgave. I was immediately convicted of how petty I’ve been in not forgiving the minor wrongs I’ve suffered. Thanks to Reverend Thompson’s example and testimony, I knew the answer when he asked “so what are you going to do?”

This brief and insufficient report does little justice to Reverend Thompson’s compelling words. It serves only as an invitation to watch the entire message at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7PrEmHcnYWQ.

Healing awaits.

 

This Week’s Thought

By Brad Campbell –

Just a thought to help start your week.

It’s Monday yet again.  A brand new week is ahead.  What did you do yesterday?  Did you spend your Sunday as it should have been spent – in God’s house?  Did you take the time to go to worship or Bible study or a Sunday School class?  Did you put forth the effort to prepare for the week ahead?  And can those folks around you this morning tell that you were in church yesterday?

I could probably show you this picture and never tell you where I was when I took it, and you would still be able to tell where I’ve been.  Of course this statue on the banks of the Mississippi River is dressed in Mardi Gras attire, and it becomes pretty obvious that I had to be in New Orleans to see this.  From looking at this, you are able to tell where I’ve been.

Can the world look at you today and tell that you’ve been in God’s house in worship?  They should be able to do so.  And if you weren’t in church yesterday, what picture are you showing the world this week?

Just a thought.

Brighten Up!

By Ryan Kelly

The world is made of people that are generally seen as “normal.”  Normal is certainly a subjective term, but it generally describes people who look and act like the majority of those around them. 

Normal – like the world

As Christians, we are not to be normal but rather abnormal. Whereas the world lives in and cares about sinful activity, we as Christians should reject sin in every way. The world loves darkness, we love light…the light of Jesus. 

In my opinion, one of the most relevant and powerful versus in Scripture come from John 3:19-22, “…the light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil. For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his works should be exposed. But whoever does what is true comes to the light, so that it may be clearly seen that his works have been carried out in God.”

The ways of God’s people are different than the ways of the other people of the world. We are to brighten a dark world. 

Are you brightening the world around you?

As we follow Jesus, the source of our light, we will illuminate the word in ways never seen before. 

So, be brighter and let your light illuminate the minds and hearts of everyone around you!
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