Therefore Having Gone

Therefore Having Gone

Monday, November 4, 2024

A REPEATED LIE

"Repeat a lie often enough and it becomes the truth."

The internet is split in attributing this quote to Lenin, Hitler, and Goebbels. 

The uncertainty, ironically, does not stop the attributions from being repeated - until they become accepted truth. 

There is a theological lie that gets repeated often and, thus, taken for truth, and it drives crazy every time I hear it: "Jesus taught more about hell than about heaven". 

You will find this sentence in the mouths of way too many preachers, from the unknown to the famous, but I don't believe I have ever heard anyone even attempt to quantify it with hard data.

It wouldn't be hard to do. There are plenty of tools online these days to help - you wouldn't even have to reread the four Gospels with a highlighter in hand.

In fact, all it takes is a little thought and reflection and you would instantly see the impossibility of Jesus teaching more about hell than heaven. 

If you DID quantify it, you would find - like this guy - that Jesus spoke on heaven at least five times as much as on hell. 

I'm not sure why people get so invested in promoting a hell of eternal torture that they have to resort to obvious lies to bolster their position. 

Satan, being the Father of Lies, undoubtedly approves.

Sunday, November 3, 2024

CONSTRUCTIVE GREED

It's strange - I won't preach again until three weeks from today. And that will be the Sunday before Thanksgiving!

(Time continues to pass at an ever increasing rate these days!)

Next Sunday is our annual Harvest Day and there will be a special speaker for the morning. The following Sunday I will be in Ghana, God willing.

Assuming my flights are all on time, I should be back in the pulpit on the 24th.

And I already know what direction that sermon will take. 

The typical Thanksgiving sermon is on gratitude and contentment, but I plan to invert that and focus on things we should be greedy for.

This thought occurred to me in connection with a passage I touched on this morning in 1 Corinthians 14 where Paul tells his audience of believers to eagerly desire spiritual gifts. 

And generally speaking, when it comes to anything we can get our hands on to further our spirits, we are never to grow content in this lifetime. We are to want more, more, more.

Like a greedy kid at Christmas.

When greed is pointed at having more of the comforts of heaven in the here and now, it is destructive.

But when greed is pointed at having more of the God of heaven in the here and now, it is endlessly constructive.


“It would seem that Our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.”
― C.S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory, and Other Addresses

Saturday, November 2, 2024

MOSES' WISH

Numbers 11 tells the fascinating story of Moses and God getting frustrated with the Israelites as they complain about having nothing but manna to eat.

They want meat and they have fond memories of the food they used to enjoy back in Egypt - when they were SLAVES.

There's material here for several different sermons.

But this week I was focused on the tail end of the story. God eases Moses' burden by calling out 70 other leaders and taking some of the Spirit that is on Moses and spreading that Spirit among the 70.

And "when the Spirit rested on them, they prophesied". 

I think the average church member hears that word "prophesy" and envisions these 70 men making weird, symbolic pronouncements of events that would occur hundreds of years in the future.

But is that what the Israelites were needing at the moment?

What they needed was correction, rebuke, and guidance. Perhaps a reminder of God's faithfulness and provision in the past. 

That seems to be what is meant by prophesying in the New Testament, anyway, and it makes sense here.

Paul says in 1 Corinthians 14, "1 Follow the way of love and eagerly desire gifts of the Spirit, especially prophecy. 2 For anyone who speaks in a tongue does not speak to people but to God. Indeed, no one understands them; they utter mysteries by the Spirit. 3 But the one who prophesies speaks to people for their strengthening, encouraging and comfort."

There's a curious epilogue in the story of Moses and the 70 new prophets of Numbers 11. Two of the men never left the camp to join the big gathering of leaders and they end up prophesying back at the camp among other people. Joshua finds this to be out of order and tells Moses that he ought to stop them.

At this point, Moses does a bit of foreshadowing of a big change coming in the future:

29 But Moses replied, “Are you jealous for my sake? I wish that all the Lord’s people were prophets and that the Lord would put his Spirit on them!”

Now and then you hear a little talk about speaking in tongues, but when was the last time you heard any teaching on prophesying in the local church? And yet, according to Paul, this is the big advantage of living in this current era of the human story: We have the Spirit and He can speak through us to edify the Body of Christ.

I need to do more thinking, reading, and praying about this because I confess my own ignorance and fear of this aspect of what the church is meant to be doing. 

Friday, November 1, 2024

MORE FIBER

After getting into a verbal tussle with a fellow believer in the comments section of a YouTube video* today, I just feel the need to say this:

If your faith makes you angry, judgmental and humorless, you are doing something very wrong.

God invited you into His family to be His son or daughter, not His theological pit bull. 

Although my opponent questioned my salvation, I did not return the favor.

Imagine calling a fellow believer's salvation into question based on a few sentences back and forth on the internet! 

So I did not suggest that he himself was unsaved - but I did wonder aloud if he was getting enough fiber in his diet.



*If you're curious about the venom this brother spat at me, just look at the discussion under this video HERE by James White. The video highlights some interesting squabbles recently among Calvinists resulting from some creeping antisemitism in their ranks. You'll have to click on the replies under my original comment/question. I am "mrgrossism" and I asked, "This development begs the question: What is it about reformed theology that opens a door to antisemitism?"


Thursday, October 31, 2024

SEEING THE POTENTIAL

On Monday, my friend Chris with Heart of Africa made the trip down to Columbus from Fort Wayne (3 hours) to demonstrate a SmartBox to a group of business men and women at my BNI meeting early Tuesday morning. 

Two weeks ago when I had asked him if he was willing to make the drive, Chris didn't hesitate. But Monday afternoon I started wondering if it was really worth his time to make a trip just to sit through a 90 minute meeting where he would get to show off the SmartBox before and after for just a few minutes. 

The SmartBox is a computer lab in a box - an ingenious configuration of 20 Chromebooks linked to a 1 TB hard drive via a self-contained router. The hard drive hosts a full K through 12 curriculum, maps, Bible studies, typing programs, and even full books. 

A single SmartBox could revolutionize the education of kids in the typical wooden bench in a tin roof shack village school in the developing world. 

It certainly sounds like a good idea.

And my experience with Chris at the BNI meeting reminded me that there really is something to "seeing is believing". He and the Box were both very well received. 

To see it in person really gets people dreaming of the potential and wanting to be a part of such an inspired idea. 


Sherri and Roger (left) were the last to leave the meeting after extended conversation with Chris (right) 

The BNI group and other individuals are working to fund a SmartBox for a pioneering educator named Samuel Yeboah and his Beacon School in Ghana. (Each SmartBox costs $8,000 to produce.) God willing, we will be taking it with us two weeks from now and delivering it in person.

If you are interested in jumping on board with this project, I have set up a fundraising site at https://givebutter.com/smartbox . We would be so grateful for your support!

We are currently 67% of the way to our goal. 

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

NOT ENOUGH TIME

I can't even cope with November's arrival the day after tomorrow. When I get my computer back, I need to get serious about moving forward with my dissertation. 

I reserved a date for my youth retreat which is supposed to become the cornerstone of my project. And I feel pretty confident that I can get my curriculum together by the time that weekend rolls around at the end of January.

BUT - I still have not reworked my prospectus and there's no guarantee that it will be quickly or automatically accepted when I do. 

And at this point, it has been so long since I last worked on the prospectus, I am not even sure I can remember what I need to do to address my professor's original criticisms.

The time crunch makes me very anxious - especially since I leave two weeks from tomorrow for a 10 day trip to Ghana. That means these next two weeks will be extra busy. And then I will return and step right into Thanksgiving!

And after Thanksgiving? I am having trouble convincing myself that I will have time and energy to do my academic work during the lead up to Christmas! (And rightly so!)

Often, writing things out like this helps to ease my anxiety, but tonight ... not so much. 

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

ABSENTMINDED

I was a bonehead today and invited extra stress into my life.

And the day was going so well.

My friend Chris drove down last night from Fort Wayne - a nearly 3 hour trip. His mission was to demonstrate the SmartBox to my business networking group this morning at our 7:00 am meeting today. 

We left the house right on time, I threw my computer bag in his back seat and we drove to the Moose Lodge downtown. 

The meeting was fantastic. There was much interest in the SmartBox and we got a thousand dollar donation toward the $8,000 we are trying to raise to take one to Ghana with us in November. 

After the meeting Chris and I made a quick stop at home so I could grab my van to follow him up to another appointment in Indy. I had to drive myself since Chris would be continuing on home up north after we finished.

THAT meeting was also fantastic and raised even more funds toward our goal. 

Chris and I then had lunch and conversation before I drove the hour back home.

It wasn't until I pulled into my drive that I remembered my computer bag was still in Chris's backseat, now 2 hours north of me and speeding on to Fort Wayne! 

So I am typing this on my phone while I go through laptop withdrawal. 

This is bad. I have never been separated from my computer over night. 😉

The frustrating thing is that I didn't even need my computer today - I am just in the habit of taking it with me when I leave the house.