Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we boast in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us. - Romans 5
Saturday, August 30, 2014
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
I am going to leave a reminder here to myself. If I am going to go to an Islamic country, where to convert to Christianity almost always leads to abandonment by family, loss of all job opportunities, loss of any chance to marry, and eventually martyrdom, then I myself must hold myself to these standards too.
How can I go up to anyone and tell them to believe in a faith that will lead to their death if I am not also willing to die for that faith also? Why should they believe if I don't have that conviction? The Gospel is worth dying for, in this country or the next.
How can I go up to anyone and tell them to believe in a faith that will lead to their death if I am not also willing to die for that faith also? Why should they believe if I don't have that conviction? The Gospel is worth dying for, in this country or the next.
Sword of Truth (not the fantasy series)
We are not called to swing the sword of Truth wildly,
cutting both friend and foe in our reckless flailing. Instead we are to use it
like Kenshin used it, "A sword is a tool to save people with." Let us use the Truth to save people.
We also need to remember who to point it at. It is not a
tool to point at our brothers and sisters and friend, nor is it really to point
at our enemies (I am thinking of ISIS right now), but it is a weapon forged by
heavenly hands to be pointed at the Enemy and the World he rules as its prince.
Another quote pops up in my head, "remember who the real enemy is" (Catching
Fire).
Monday, August 18, 2014
Devo Post #5
8/18/14
2 Timothy 2:22
Flee the evil desires of youth and pursue righteousness, faith, love and peace, along with those who call on the Lord out of a pure heart
Flee youthful desires. I wonder if the youthful desires back in the 1st century are similar or the same as the desires in the 21st century. Who am I kidding. What are the youthful desires now? Relationships? Respect? Prosperity? Indulgence? Entitlement? Do I need to break these down for myself?
I myself have been tempted and idolatrized these desires. I want a relationship. I want a marriage. I want to find someone I can walk with for the rest of my life and serve God and family and church together. I want that. That is something that God has ordained and is beautiful and represents the Bridegroom and Bride. This is a reflection of God’s covenant and God’s love and God’s restoration before the fall. But it can become an idol, and when it does we create a crown and throne above God’s.
I also want respect. Respect in the christian community as a leader and a servant. When I do this, I get my rewards on earth and not in heaven. I will be pursuing my own glory. This applies also in the academic or scientific community. This also applies in the “real world.” We all want acceptance and human praise for our accomplishments and gifts. We all want that. It is part of our selfish and sinful and wicked nature.
Then there is prosperity. Does God give us prosperity? Sometimes. Some more than others, as in accordance to His will. Most of us are called to be poor though, as we are to give more than we receive, and basic math tells us that we will end up with less than we had before if this algorithm is looped multiple times, even if there are times of bountiful materialistic blessings from God. But prosperity is not to be expected from God, and it is definitely not something to be idolatrized. Health? God can at any moment give us cancer, which does not differentiate between healthy and unhealthy people. God can give financial hardship at any time. Natural disasters or accidents can occur. But God does promise persecution and suffering for His children, to discipline them and mold them and have them bear the purest olive oil possible. We suffer because Christ suffer, and so we will also share in His glory at the end of the age, the Day of the Lord.
Indulgence is just idolizing the pleasures that God has created on Earth for us to enjoy, as well as following Satan’s world’s example of how we should be living. This form of living is wrought in self-idolatry and selfish thoughts, uncaring and just plain evil. Think about Noah’s time. Think about Tower of Babel. Think about Sodom and Gomorrah. We may be close in our World’s wickedness to those period of history, and you can bet God is angry.
Entitlement is our pride. We believe we have unlimited potential and the authority of gods. “The world revolves around me,” we say. We are the “me” generation right now. We are the “yuppies” right now. We are collectively in the pursuit of our own happiness. That is the pride that led to our downfall since the beginning, as well as Lucifer’s. Why do we walk in our father’s shoes? Like father like offspring I guess. It is the acceptance that we are weak and wicked and deserve eternal punishment that we can begin to understand Jesus’s love and sacrifice on the cross. It is only then can we understand and seek God’s love and God’s kingdom.
Guess I do need to explain these things to myself.
Guess I do need to explain these things to myself.
I guess this is what Tim Keller says when he talks about how the young people put hope into worldly things. We have so much hope and faith in our future that when tragedy strikes or God uses RNG on us and our plans and dreams bottom out, we are left disillusioned and depressed. That is why God calls us to find others of pure heart, to seek accountability and discipleship and a living example of God’s will in the lives of His people. We are to pursue not our own happiness, but the righteousness of God.
Saturday, August 9, 2014
Me Me Me (feelings post #3)
“Don’t bother too much about your feelings. When they are humble,
loving, brave, give thanks for them; when they are conceited, selfish,
cowardly, ask to have them altered. In neither case are they you, but only a
thing that happens to you. What matters is your intentions and your behavior.” - C.S. Lewis
Again about feelings. Feelings are pretty much...neutral, and created by God. Which makes them good. But guess what, we use them to glorify ourselves, which is idolatrous. Just take a look.
What makes me happy? I get the grade I wanted on my test. I
entered into a relationship that I've dreamed about. I got the call back from
the job I wanted. I bought a new video game or shoes. Something made me happy.
Something I wanted or desired occurred. Me me me.
What makes me sad? Something bad happened to me. Someone
crashed into my car. Someone hurt or abandoned me. Something I did caused my
reputation to decrease in another's eyes. Today was just a bad day. What can't
the world just be the way how I liked it? What can't the world just revolve
around me? Seriously, why can't I just end world suffering? Me me me.
What makes me angry? Someone took something from me,
something that I was entitled to. Another guy swooped in and swept away my
crush. A guy cut in front of my on the freeway. Someone stole my lunch money.
The fellowship doesn't acknowledge my hard work and service. Me me me.
We realize that a lot of times our feelings are really about
ourselves and we have to admit it, but to be sweetly broken and then molded in
the image of Christ is to use our feelings for God. Then it will look like
this:
What makes me happy? Someone is saved and I get to call them
my brother or sister. There is growth in the church. The Gospel is being
preached to all the nations. There is persecution in the Church, but we are
rising to it, producing fruit and oil under the pressure. Our happiness comes
from the second fruit of the Spirit that was planted in our hearts, Joy. Now we
are happy for the Kingdom of God. God God God.
What makes me sad? The hurt and pain and sin within the
fellowship. Those who are still lost. The persecution of our brothers and
sisters. The groaning of the world since creation, that we live in a fallen
world and we still wait for the second coming of Christ, who will restore the
world. Christ Christ Christ.
What makes me angry? The wickedness of the World. How there
are people who rape people for fun. How there are people who sell others into
slavery. How there are people beheading children! May God's wrath and justice
have its place in this world and in the future to come. God God God.
To follow God is to realize what God feels. Let our hearts
be broken by the things that breaks God's heart. To do that, let us discover
what God's heart truly is.
Why don't I share my testimony?
Coming to Pittsburgh, I have found it is hard to share my
testimony. Well even in Kansas City, I really never shared it to my brothers or
sisters there too. Why?
The first thing is I fear is spiritual pride. I feel like I
will become self-righteous or others will see me as self-righteous when I tell
my testimony. That's why I like it when my parents tell the part of my
testimony of how I was in high school and earlier, so I don't have to. Part of
me wants to be treated and seen as the previous ACF coordinators, or alumni
that people keep on bringing up as men of faith who have led other men and
built them up. Maybe that's is my dream or calling, to be able to lead and
serve and care and guide and be accountable for other men of faith. I want to
be like them. This leads to the second thing, which is the fear of
expectations.
I fear that people after hearing my testimony will see me in
a different light, positively or negatively, instead of seeing me of how I am
currently and locally. I don't want to be someone I am not, someone whose
callings and growth are different from those of my past. I want to be just
Daniel Lee, the person these people currently know, the person who is currently
fit to serve and love and care and disciple and be accountable for right now.
Like shared in cell group, but sometimes I think others from my past can tell
my testimony better than I can, or be more honest about it. Both people who
have seen me at my best, serving and caring, and those who have seen me at my
worst, when I was depressed and "emo" and lashed out and hurt others,
or when I refused help out of my own pride of not to be pitied.
The third is natural. When I share my testimony, it will
also expose the ugliness of my own sin. As I tell my testimony, I can't help
but fear that my sins of jealousy, pride, idolatry, and hate come out. I have
to tell about how much I hated youth group, hated the young adults, hated not
having a fellowship that everyone else seems to have had, hated how my Washu
fellowship was immature, hated how there was a lack of elderly guidance, how
certain people have hurt me, and how I've hurt and betrayed and abandoned
others in my own depression and wickedness. I feel like there are way too many
negative elements in my testimony, instead of positive ones, and that weakens
my testimony. But I realize, there are people who can benefit from my
testimony. I've been there. I've done things I regret. I've almost committed
suicide, because of fellowship. I've been hurt by people. I've abandoned
people. I have failed the men of ACF at Washu, and all the younger folk who
looked up to me as a leader and role model. I have failed my leadership team. I
know what it is like to be pitied by the fellowship, that they only cared for
me because God tells them to and they have to because that's like a Christian.
But it was very hard for me then, and still hard now, to tell if they were
genuine and sincere, or only doing it because I got down on my knees and
begged, or alienated myself and ruthlessly pushed people away in a desperate
but silent cry of asking for help. In these moments I can't help but think
(now) that I was just testing God and fellowship. But now when I see people
doing the exact same things, having depressing thoughts in their minds and
really being mind-trapped by themselves, I can empathize. I've been down that
road. I can show them the light, but like myself, they will have to be the ones
to walk towards it. Only God and God alone can rescue them. No one else. At the
end of the day, they have to man up and say "God is enough for me."
Then God will come and deliver and reveal the fullness of His Love to them. I
know. I've been there. Guess who else has been there, in the pit of abandonment
and loneliness. Jesus.
The last one is that when I tell my testimony, my I feel
like my bitterness will come back. I fear that it never really has gone, that
I've only been suppressing it. It is the pain, the suffering, the heartache,
the bitterness, the hatred of people and God, it all floods back. One sister
called it having a splinter or piece of glass embedded into my flesh. Over time
I have gotten most of it out, but a tiny bit still remains. The skin has grown
over it, but from time to time it hurts and pierces the flesh when I move. To
remove it completely, one must cut open the flesh and dig out the last piece,
but it will hurt. That is what I fear, the pain and hurt rushing back from the
past. In cell group, they mentioned that there is still God's timing involved.
Maybe this will be the thorn in my side for the rest of my life, like with
Paul. It could be suffering in the name of Christ, or pressure that will help
me produce the purest of oil, my Gethsemane.
One of the burdens of the current ACF is openness and
vulnerability. We are afraid of sharing the ugliness in our lives, and when we
cannot do that, we close ourselves to the ugliness of others. Then we don't
have the church as God intended. Another is to forgive one another, and
especially forgiving ourselves. We have to admit our failures and sin against
others as wickedness, as evil, as our SIN (not just "brokenness").
Once we do that, we can then start to understand the Grace of God. He then can
break us of our pride and our past, and create anew a new person. He is
continuously cleansing us and restoring us and sanctifying us. Let us not follow
in the footsteps of the servant who was forgiven by the King, and yet could not
forgive his own servant. That is NOT us. We through the strength of God are better
than that. We can forgive because Christ's blood has paid the price. Nothing
can separate us from the Love of God, not our wickedness, our failures, our
sin, or our past.
Living Water
What if you found a cup of water. The clearest
water you ever laid eyes on. With no contaminants and a taste so pure.
Clearly the most beautiful cup of water ever found.
But what if someone told you that the cup held the Water of Life? Water that can quench your thirst for all eternity. Water that can heal all sickness. Water that can clean all dirt and pain and blemish from any body? Water that will never stop overflowing. Then that water becomes something marvelous and wonderful. It transcends all worldly description of beauty.
This is what the woman at the well found. The well of living water. The fount of living water.
But what if someone told you that the cup held the Water of Life? Water that can quench your thirst for all eternity. Water that can heal all sickness. Water that can clean all dirt and pain and blemish from any body? Water that will never stop overflowing. Then that water becomes something marvelous and wonderful. It transcends all worldly description of beauty.
This is what the woman at the well found. The well of living water. The fount of living water.
Why did my Savior have to die if there is no Hell?
You know who isn’t beautiful? You and I. Yet it makes God look BIG and GLORIOUS when He is restoring us, making us who are ugly into holy beings. What is sanctification anyways? What is suffering anyways? What is being sweetly broken anyways? What is being made new anyways? What is Love anyways? What is light without the darkness?
Who are we to decide what is beautiful and what is not to God? Aren’t we just comparing whose burnt offering looks better in God’s eyes without knowing what breaks His heart?
Jesus wants the trampled and broken. He wants the rose. He is the Bridegroom to the Church. In our dirtiest and weakest state He came to meet us. To redeem us as THE kinsmen redeemer. That is the power of the Gospel. What is the Gospel anyways?
What is the Bible anyways? Is it just a book? Is it just art? Or is it the living breathe of God, revealed by the Holy Spirit as truth? When we read the Bible, aren’t we listening to God as Elijah or Isaiah or Moses did? What is intimacy anyways? Why was the veil torn anyways? Who or what is the Holy Spirit anyways?
When did we start talking about the Gospel without the Cross?
No Cross, no Crown.
You know who isn’t beautiful? You and I. Yet it makes God look BIG and GLORIOUS when He is restoring us, making us who are ugly into holy beings. What is sanctification anyways? What is suffering anyways? What is being sweetly broken anyways? What is being made new anyways? What is Love anyways? What is light without the darkness?
Who are we to decide what is beautiful and what is not to God? Aren’t we just comparing whose burnt offering looks better in God’s eyes without knowing what breaks His heart?
Jesus wants the trampled and broken. He wants the rose. He is the Bridegroom to the Church. In our dirtiest and weakest state He came to meet us. To redeem us as THE kinsmen redeemer. That is the power of the Gospel. What is the Gospel anyways?
What is the Bible anyways? Is it just a book? Is it just art? Or is it the living breathe of God, revealed by the Holy Spirit as truth? When we read the Bible, aren’t we listening to God as Elijah or Isaiah or Moses did? What is intimacy anyways? Why was the veil torn anyways? Who or what is the Holy Spirit anyways?
When did we start talking about the Gospel without the Cross?
No Cross, no Crown.
Friday, August 8, 2014
Today during breakfast I decided to look up the images of the beheaded christian children in Iraq.
I nearly puked.
I wish I did.
I wanted to print out the pictures of the dad holding up the limp, headless body of his daughter and shove it into the faces of all the Christians I know. But that wouldn't be very loving would it? What can we do about it...pray? Give some money? Make people more wary of me and avoid me in fear that I will shove more reality into their faces?
My heart is in agony today, and I know EXACTLY why. It breaks in the same way God's heart breaks for his children who are losing their lives for their faith in Iraq and Syria. It breaks for all of my brothers and sisters here who believe they are "suffering" and believe the events happening overseas do not undermine or negate their "suffering." Look at reality. Is your own suffering just some kind of self-glorification or self-idolatry, or is it really true suffering? Did you just find out you got cancer? Were you just tortured for the name of Christ, like the apostles were? Did you get a telephone call saying that your daughter just died in a car crash? If not, GET OVER YOURSELF!
In a more gentle tone, I always have (day) dreams that my sufferings are real. I thought I've had it bad. I deceive myself telling that everyone abandons me or hates me or ignores me or treats me like scum. I've had those feelings of heartbreak when I learn that I'm not going to get something I really really wanted (a relationship or fellowship) or someone who I really cared about doesn't see me in the same way. I am very selfish and also believed my suffering was justified, just read any of my earlier posts on this blog. But it doesn't compare with the current sufferings of my brothers and sisters in Iraq today. It just doesn't. I would be sinning gravely against these brothers and sisters if I pretended my suffering was in the same category as theirs. Just pretending. Holy Spirit convict me.
I really don't think saying "Oh but they are now in heaven and have eternal peace and joy" skirts the issue here. To be Christian is to love, because God first loved us. That means we have to know what breaks God's heart and makes our Lord sad. Only then can we love in accordance to His will.
I'm going to try to hold a prayer meeting sometime this weekend for these children and families. They are suffering for Christ. They are trying to survive while we just sit here and indulge in our own bubble of SELF (self-glorification/selfishness/self-esteem/self-worry/self-idolatry). For just one day, one hour, can we not think about ourselves and just think about others and God?
I want to post the pictures here on this blog, but that would just end up getting the blog banned.
Here are some pictures linked elsewhere
I nearly puked.
I wish I did.
I wanted to print out the pictures of the dad holding up the limp, headless body of his daughter and shove it into the faces of all the Christians I know. But that wouldn't be very loving would it? What can we do about it...pray? Give some money? Make people more wary of me and avoid me in fear that I will shove more reality into their faces?
My heart is in agony today, and I know EXACTLY why. It breaks in the same way God's heart breaks for his children who are losing their lives for their faith in Iraq and Syria. It breaks for all of my brothers and sisters here who believe they are "suffering" and believe the events happening overseas do not undermine or negate their "suffering." Look at reality. Is your own suffering just some kind of self-glorification or self-idolatry, or is it really true suffering? Did you just find out you got cancer? Were you just tortured for the name of Christ, like the apostles were? Did you get a telephone call saying that your daughter just died in a car crash? If not, GET OVER YOURSELF!
In a more gentle tone, I always have (day) dreams that my sufferings are real. I thought I've had it bad. I deceive myself telling that everyone abandons me or hates me or ignores me or treats me like scum. I've had those feelings of heartbreak when I learn that I'm not going to get something I really really wanted (a relationship or fellowship) or someone who I really cared about doesn't see me in the same way. I am very selfish and also believed my suffering was justified, just read any of my earlier posts on this blog. But it doesn't compare with the current sufferings of my brothers and sisters in Iraq today. It just doesn't. I would be sinning gravely against these brothers and sisters if I pretended my suffering was in the same category as theirs. Just pretending. Holy Spirit convict me.
I really don't think saying "Oh but they are now in heaven and have eternal peace and joy" skirts the issue here. To be Christian is to love, because God first loved us. That means we have to know what breaks God's heart and makes our Lord sad. Only then can we love in accordance to His will.
I'm going to try to hold a prayer meeting sometime this weekend for these children and families. They are suffering for Christ. They are trying to survive while we just sit here and indulge in our own bubble of SELF (self-glorification/selfishness/self-esteem/self-worry/self-idolatry). For just one day, one hour, can we not think about ourselves and just think about others and God?
I want to post the pictures here on this blog, but that would just end up getting the blog banned.
Here are some pictures linked elsewhere
Monday, July 28, 2014
I don't burn bridges
Never do
But I should stop trying to rebuild them
I should just let those bridges get abandoned,
the ones that are no longer traveled on,
and stop waiting by the riverside
I should walk away and find newer bridges to build,
ones that span between wonderful towns
I should maintain those bridges,
so that the people who commute on them,
have nothing to fear from the raging streams,
that sweep below them
But, when I walk away,
from the lonely bridge ends,
I shall leave a sign,
on the other side of the riverbank
What it will say is,
I will always care for you,
and will always be there when you need me
Come find me,
on this side of the riverbank
Your Friend
Never do
But I should stop trying to rebuild them
I should just let those bridges get abandoned,
the ones that are no longer traveled on,
and stop waiting by the riverside
I should walk away and find newer bridges to build,
ones that span between wonderful towns
I should maintain those bridges,
so that the people who commute on them,
have nothing to fear from the raging streams,
that sweep below them
But, when I walk away,
from the lonely bridge ends,
I shall leave a sign,
on the other side of the riverbank
What it will say is,
I will always care for you,
and will always be there when you need me
Come find me,
on this side of the riverbank
Your Friend
I wrote this quite a while ago, my senior year of college
(wow...5 years ago). I've already forgotten why or to whom I specifically wrote
it for, but I remembered it was also for all of those who passed through ACF in
their time in college. It was for those who stayed for all 4 years or only
attended a handful of times. It was for those who left feeling loved and
secure, or those who left feeling betrayed or alienated. Unfortunately for me,
I was the latter, having been told the night before graduation that I didn't
really belong. That fellowship was not for me.
But I know that was a lie. Fellowship, the body of Christ,
the communion of the saints, the royal priesthood, was for any and all who love
because they realized the depth of love God had for them, and the price Christ
paid on the Cross. We as the body, as flawed and failed as we are, have the
strength of God that holds us together. Yes, we may hurt and abandon and fail
each other (as I have done to more than just one person), there is always the
hope in Christ that can bring us back together again. That is the beauty of
brotherhood and sisterhood.
No matter how much I've been hurt or betrayed in the past, I
will keep on lovin' and keep on forgivin' because that's what Christ did for
me. There is no suffering I will endure that will go beyond what Christ endured
on the Cross for me. To me, when Jesus said the greatest love was to die for
one's friends, I don't always take it as a physical death. To me it means dying
to our self, to put my friends over myself. To serve and love and cherish and
care for them above my own needs. Unconditional love. Time and time I may be
hurt by them, whether it is by evil or just the hedgehog's dilemma, I will
forgive them time and time again.
Lord give me the strength to hold others up.
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
Do you know Jesus? Does Jesus know you?
Do you know Jesus? Does Jesus know you?
Analogy: I can say I know a lot about President Barak Obama.
I see him a lot on the news. I know he has a fashionable wife. I know he has
two daughters who are becoming teenagers and now Barak is "in" with
hip youth culture. He's got a Nobel peace prize. He is trying hard to change
the economy and has made various promises and actions to pursue that (whether
he is succeeding or not is unimportant to this discussion). He seems to be buddy
buddy with Ellen Degeneres and likes kids. I might even have read several
biographies about him.
But if I were to go to D.C. and walk up to the White House
and tell the secret service that I want to see my friend, the reply I will get
is "I don't know you." Reminds you of a certain verse? (Luke 13:24,
Matt 25:12)
Do we talk about Jesus as if we know Him intimately, or do
we talk about Him because we have heard about Him, from songs or other people,
but never sought Him directly ourselves?
So there are two questions: Do you know Jesus? Does Jesus
know you?
If we sincerely know someone, we love them.
Jesus Himself has said, "If you love me, you
will..."
Jesus told us to love our brothers and sisters and that we
are His brothers and sisters, co-heirs to the Kingdom of God (Matthew 12:49).
He calls us His friends (John 15:15), and whoever loves His brothers and
sisters loves Him (Matthew 25:40, 1 John 4:20-21). He also says those who love
the world do not love God (1 John 2:15). John and OT prophets teach us that if
we don't provide for the poor or needy, or a brother in need, then we do not
have love in us (1 John 3:17, Isaiah 58, Proverbs 19:17...list can go on). You
can't hate or neglect the poor and love Jesus. Jesus Himself tells us that the
greatest love is to die for our friends (John 15:13). Guess what Jesus did on
the Cross eh?
Jesus says, "If you love me, you will keep my commands"
(John 14:15, 1 John 5:2). What are Jesus's commands? Some of them are listed
above, but obviously not exhaustive. Are you following them? Not trying to be
legalistic, but there is a cause and effect. If we truly believe, then there
will be a heart change, one that seeks God's heart. The old has gone, the new
has come (2 Cor 5:17).
To know God, we have to fully confess our brokenness and
sin, because only then do we understand God's glory and Love and why He must
punish us. That is why there is repentance and a heart to do good and sin no
more (1 Peter 4:19, 1 John 3:6, 1 John 5:18, 2 John 1:9).
Test and examine yourself (2 Cor 13:5). Ask again, "Do I
know Jesus? Does Jesus know me?"
I ask these questions daily myself, and to be honest, I
always seem to come up short. But that just leads to a more passionate pursuit
of God's heart and God's Word the next day.
http://thinkpoint.wordpress.com/2013/05/02/he-says-hes-a-christian-but/
http://thinkpoint.wordpress.com/2013/05/02/he-says-hes-a-christian-but/
Saturday, July 12, 2014
Cell group today:
For the guys - Doesn't your wife deserve someone who prays more than he plays basketball?
For the girls - Shouldn't you like a guy who prays more than he plays basketball?
(not to hate on people who play or like basketball, that was just the example used. you get the picture)
Story of Arthur
There was a man of God named Arthur who knew a Japanese brother at church. One day he saw that his brother had his eyes closed and head bowed during service. Because he was close with this brother and knew of his spiritual walk, Arthur knew his brother was in deep prayer. However, the preacher singled this brother out during service, "don't sleep during the sermon!"
After service was over, Arthur went to his brother and asked him, "I know you were in prayer, why did you let the preacher single you out like that?" The brother replied, "It is okay, I needed that." The brother knew that even though the rebuke was incorrect and unfair, he also knew that the rebuke will help him grow in his understanding of God's love and truth.
Today was a probably one of the best cell groups I've ever attended (and I've attended many, and many of the others are now tainted with betrayal...as mentioned during the cell group). We have deep sharing and some of the most raw and honest prayer of this summer. That room was shaken, as it was shaken in Acts 4. I was crying at the end of it, and I wasn't the only one. Conviction. Burden. Fellowship. Brotherhood. Truth. Kindness. Hope. Freedom.
I remember mentioning earlier about the taste of heaven. Well this was what I was referring to.
It is funny how I thought during cell group when was the last time I was filled with the Holy Spirit like Peter was in Acts 3 and 4, and I couldn't remember. Then later in cell group I was definitely led by the Holy Spirit to speak. It was...a funny feeling. When you are filled with the Spirit, you speak with boldness.
If God decided to take away my future wife or fiance from me, or allow my child to be kidnapped, raped, and killed, would I have the heart to forgive? Is God enough for me? Am I to that point yet? I don't think so...even with the level of betrayal I've faced in my life, the loss of brotherhood and fellowship and intimacy.
Can I be like Horatio Spafford, or the Amish families who forgave the one who killed their family members, or the Mennonite woman who forgive the man who kidnapped, raped, and killed her daughter. Even though I pray pray pray that this doesn't happen to me or those I love and care for, believe me, someone nearby is truly in this kind of pain. Shouldn't we be there for them? Isn't that what true brotherhood or sisterhood about? Can't we ask others what kind of pain or burdens they are under right now?
It is truly amazing that God can used the dota2 internationals to bring a bit of honesty and sharing into the body of Christ. Just. Amazing.
It isn't about being ready for marriage. Truly no one is ready for marriage. But it is about being ready to be made ready for marriage.
For the guys - Doesn't your wife deserve someone who prays more than he plays basketball?
For the girls - Shouldn't you like a guy who prays more than he plays basketball?
(not to hate on people who play or like basketball, that was just the example used. you get the picture)
Story of Arthur
There was a man of God named Arthur who knew a Japanese brother at church. One day he saw that his brother had his eyes closed and head bowed during service. Because he was close with this brother and knew of his spiritual walk, Arthur knew his brother was in deep prayer. However, the preacher singled this brother out during service, "don't sleep during the sermon!"
After service was over, Arthur went to his brother and asked him, "I know you were in prayer, why did you let the preacher single you out like that?" The brother replied, "It is okay, I needed that." The brother knew that even though the rebuke was incorrect and unfair, he also knew that the rebuke will help him grow in his understanding of God's love and truth.
Today was a probably one of the best cell groups I've ever attended (and I've attended many, and many of the others are now tainted with betrayal...as mentioned during the cell group). We have deep sharing and some of the most raw and honest prayer of this summer. That room was shaken, as it was shaken in Acts 4. I was crying at the end of it, and I wasn't the only one. Conviction. Burden. Fellowship. Brotherhood. Truth. Kindness. Hope. Freedom.
I remember mentioning earlier about the taste of heaven. Well this was what I was referring to.
It is funny how I thought during cell group when was the last time I was filled with the Holy Spirit like Peter was in Acts 3 and 4, and I couldn't remember. Then later in cell group I was definitely led by the Holy Spirit to speak. It was...a funny feeling. When you are filled with the Spirit, you speak with boldness.
If God decided to take away my future wife or fiance from me, or allow my child to be kidnapped, raped, and killed, would I have the heart to forgive? Is God enough for me? Am I to that point yet? I don't think so...even with the level of betrayal I've faced in my life, the loss of brotherhood and fellowship and intimacy.
Can I be like Horatio Spafford, or the Amish families who forgave the one who killed their family members, or the Mennonite woman who forgive the man who kidnapped, raped, and killed her daughter. Even though I pray pray pray that this doesn't happen to me or those I love and care for, believe me, someone nearby is truly in this kind of pain. Shouldn't we be there for them? Isn't that what true brotherhood or sisterhood about? Can't we ask others what kind of pain or burdens they are under right now?
It is truly amazing that God can used the dota2 internationals to bring a bit of honesty and sharing into the body of Christ. Just. Amazing.
It isn't about being ready for marriage. Truly no one is ready for marriage. But it is about being ready to be made ready for marriage.
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Love is like a rocket reaching orbit
To be cared for and to be understood
To convince a girl you understand her
Drop a sincere and sentimental note
Its all about perception
Tiny bridge of trust leads to deep conversations
All girls have a monster of insecurity inside them
but some are able to hide it and overcome more than others
but some are able to hide it and overcome more than others
Fate vs destiny, everyone pulling strings
In the words of big fish, a real man is the one who takes leadership, takes the risks, and takes the initiative to understand.
All I have ever wanted from my future wife was that she desires me for being a man after God's own heart.
Personalities
will develop and change over time. Interests are just temporary, coming
and going on a whim. Looks also change in time. Will I be able to look
at my wife and tell she is still beautiful when she is 40, 60, and God
willing, 90? Do I want someone who is only interested in my talents or
worldly traits? All I need, not want, is a woman whose source for her
strength is the same as mine.
What makes a
relationship work is not compatibility or romantic attraction. It is
heart, it is faith, it is trust, it is the choice to care for them, and
it is the choice to understand them.
Am I
disregarding romantic feelings and compatibility (interests, physical
attraction, checklist traits)? Not really, but they are only 2nd tier of
importance to what truly matter. If a romantic relationship/marriage is
a God ordained analogy of Jesus and the church, do any of the
aforementioned traits even matter?
All I ever wanted to be is a man of God.
Therefore the only girl I desire is one who understands the depth of that commitment and is willing to accept it.
When she asks me "who are you?" I will tell her "I am your brother in Christ, and a man after God's own heart."
When she asks me "who are you?" I will tell her "I am your brother in Christ, and a man after God's own heart."
God in center in the relationship. God is enough.
edit: http://benshim.tumblr.com/post/92784732269/what-kind-of-woman-do-i-find-beautiful-laughs this is an interesting twist to how to look/appreciate/respect a woman of a Godly nature. I'm one to hesitate in putting words into God's mouth, as God can say much much more that cannot be encompassed in human words or two scriptural references, but I pretty much agree 100%.
edit: http://benshim.tumblr.com/post/92784732269/what-kind-of-woman-do-i-find-beautiful-laughs this is an interesting twist to how to look/appreciate/respect a woman of a Godly nature. I'm one to hesitate in putting words into God's mouth, as God can say much much more that cannot be encompassed in human words or two scriptural references, but I pretty much agree 100%.
Love language
I took the test. It said I liked quality time.
But I've really never received physical touch or gifts much, especially from
girls. When a brother touches me in a friendly manner, such as a hug or
a grip on the shoulder, it makes me feel like I belong. When a girl
touches me, its like a lightning bolt through my body (like Tim Keller
puts it), even if its just as friends.
The few
gifts I have, I've noticed i cherish deeply and they always invoke
memories of people. People far away. People long gone from my life.
People who will always have a spot in my heart. I remember them all.
Though
acts of service is my strongest love language, and I do it so often, I
feel like I would cheapen others' acts of service toward me. This has
happened before and I've learned to try to appreciate others' acts and
not compare them to mine quantitatively. But I also noticed that of all
the love languages, I can identify and notice this one first in my
sisters. Maybe I am attracted to this love language, more than I thought I did. At least it almost seems like this is a quality I want in a
future wife. Someone who gives to the fellowship and cares deeply for
her friends and family.
Words. Sometimes I feel
like actions speak louder than words. Unfortunately the only words I
seem to remember are the negative ones spoken to me in anger or spite.
Maybe this is the one gift I'm not attracted to or need. Will need to
explore this.
At the very least, I feel like I
would desire all the gifts if not just 4 in my marriage. There are ones I'm so low on that they will have a huge impact. And there are ones I'm
naturally inclined to (quality time). And there are ones that mirror my
heart (or God's servant heart) that I notice first.
Quick Notes 1
Notes from workshop night:
The two greatest decisions a person will make in his/her life: choosing faith and choosing a spouse
Choosing a church based on need (non-fundamental) becomes toxic
Acts 2:42-47, Romans 12:3-13, Ephesians 4:1-3, 11-16,35-32
1 Timothy 3
There is no christian spiritual gift designed to boost our own self-esteem, only for others/common good
The church needs to be under scripture, not above it
Do not live your life as if its an investment, but count it already lost
What christians have poured their life into you?
Sunday, June 29, 2014
Devo post #4
6/29/14
Hebrews 3:12-14
Take care, brothers, lest there be in any of you an evil, unbelieving heart, leading you to fall away from the living God. But exhort one another every day, as long as it is called “today,” that none of you may be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin. For we have come to share in Christ, if indeed we hold our original confidence firm to the end.
Stolen from JW and TC, something that I need to store in my heart.
There is always a worry that evil will take us away from God. We have doubts. We still continue to sin. There is always failure in our brokenness. We are still not perfect and will be that way until we die. Only then will the perfection in Christ become complete. Still today we strive for righteousness and to be made in the image of Christ. This is a daily and continuous struggle. That is what our lives should be.
We are called by the author of Hebrews (Paul) to exhort one another everyday. In cell group we believe that this is kind of impossible, since to call up everyone we know to exhort them would be hella time consuming, and exhorting the same person day after day will cause them to be tired out and annoyed by us. Yes, exhorting one another is exhilarating but also extremely tiring. There should be some rests, but we can exhort a different brother or sister each day. That should fulfill the verse right?
How do we exhort then? To tell our brothers and sisters that we are to always point towards the Cross, the Gospel. When we sin we fall away from the Gospel. When we love and come together as the church, we are living out the Gospel and pointing others to the Cross. When we think and discuss and take notice of the end times, that just makes the Cross more relevant and more dire. We need the Cross!
When we exhort one another, it is to prevent the other from falling into sin and having their hearts hardened. But in reality people get annoyed when we point out their sins and shove scripture down their throats. How do we exhort and admonish with gentleness in the Spirit? It is so hard. I want to love on my brothers and sisters, especially on my brothers, and want to “sharpen iron on iron”, but to them it always seems like I am just pounding on their heads, being all self-righteous, and always have condescending words for them. How do I not do this? Is it my execution or their immaturity in the Word? How does the Holy Spirit join us in unity when there is enmity? How God how? All I want is brothers who are willing to help me with my walk like how I hear BS and BQ do it. Those stories of bands of brothers who keep encouraging each other and are harsh with each other make my own spirit get excited. The stirrings man the stirrings of my heart when I hear these testimonies. I want it! I desire growth! I desire fellowship! I desire community! I desire accountability! I desire discipleship! I desire perfection and righteousness and holiness! Am I really wrong in saying any of this!?!?!?!?
The last verse talks about talking to our brothers and sisters about Christ? Do I do enough of that? Am I continuously asking my brothers and sisters, “Do you acknowledge Christ’s love for you today? Is the Gospel manifested in your life today? How are you dwelling in the Word? Is there joy or praise or peace today?” Yeah...I don’t say these to people enough. I am extremely glad that there are brothers and sisters who say these things to me. So many. I am blessed. I am glad there are those who are willing to be harsh to me in the Word, because they love me. I am glad there are those who are willing to listen to my problems and my doubts of God’s calling in my life. I am glad there are those who are willing to encourage me. I am grateful to God that He has sent accountability partners in my life, and teachers of the Word in the church through my peers and elders. I am glad the Holy Spirit is apparent in His workings in my life, and that I have a passion to research the Word and teaching on the Word. This is a gift that not everyone has been blessed with, and I just want to take full advantage of it in service and love for my brothers and sisters. Like R.C. Sproul said, to grown in the knowledge of the Word is useless if you cannot use it to love the church. It will soon cause you to distance yourself from people, and that is no good thing.
So if I continue to talk about Christ in my dialogues with my brothers and sisters, especially who Christ is in me and how the Holy Spirit is moving in me, will this bring confidence in God and in the faith to my brothers and sisters? Can this be applied to those who have forsaken the faith as well? Oh God please let it be so. Your will be done.
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