Tag: Benders Mennonite Church

  • What’s the DIFFERENCE between Christians & non-Christians?

    What’s the DIFFERENCE between Christians & non-Christians?

    So as not to reinvent the wheel or simply understate what others have taught previously, I share with you the Christian witness of a wonderful background history of context, culture, and some geography of Paul’s Letters to the Thessalonians as HOMEWORK for a Bible Study I will be teaching, God willing, next Sunday, 9:15 a.m. at Bender’s Mennonite Church.  Please pray also for me.

    The following is for benefit of ALL believers. Please SHARE YOUR COMMENTS.

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    What’s the DIFFERENCE between Christians & non-Christians?

    This is essentially the question by residents of every city and every town to first century Christians as they preached the Gospel.

    “What makes YOU different from US?

    How do you answer this question in your town for your 21st century non-Christian neighbors and unsaved relatives?

    Do you get it right?  Do you TELL them how DIFFERENT you are from them?  Do you suppose that this DIFFERENCE sounds like “Good News” to unbelievers?

    Many Letters of the New Testament make much mention of ‘Jews and Gentiles,’ from the language and cultures of the first century.  What we fail to realize of this distinction is an important one of Holiness that requires separation to God from the evil and sin of the world.

    • The Jew was separated to the Holiness of God.
    • The Gentile was not yet adopted for separation to the Holiness of God. Gentile is a term meaning Nations or Ethic Peoples other than Jews.
    • The Gospel, consistent throughout ALL Letters to the first century church, is Good News:

    “The Perfect Sacrifice of Christ Jesus on the Cross is for ALL Peoples – Jew and Gentile.

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    So in a nutshell, what was the first century Christian answer?  Essentially:

    There is NO difference between me (a follower of Christ Jesus) and you (an unbeliever).

    You may read of it in great detail in Paul’s Letter to the Romans; or you may read succinct summary in Paul’s Letter to the Ephesians; OR you may study your Old Testament and the History of the first century Church as detailed by Luke in The Acts of the Apostles.

    With some homework and study of the background leading up to the Letters to the Churches, God will reveal much more than the former and current relevance of all Scripture, including the Good News of these New Testament Letters.

    The familiar New Testament story of witness is that a Jew from Judea, with Jerusalem as home of their God, travels to a town.

    Take for example, Thessaloniki, Macedonia on the Aegean Sea, with local gentiles (Greeks) of their own traditions and culture.  Thessalonians (as they are called) are ruled by the same empire (country) Rome, on the Tyrrhenian Sea, on the Italia peninsula across the Adriatic Sea from Macedonia, with power over all the lands of the Mediterranean.

    (The embedded PowerPoint Slideshow by Cooper Church of Christ in Cooper, Texas, US is our homework.)

    Thessalonica of Macedonia

    For 21st century readers of Thessalonians: Consider the hostile environment of the Roman Empire as compared to our current environment in all the world, hostile to Jesus Christ.

    • Jews who had dispersed into the Nations (Gentiles) tended to act as if they were morally better than their native hosts.
    • ALL Gentiles had in common a civil authority and local culture inclined toward godlessness, unless some rule of god could help maintain the political power of local, state, national, and international rule.

    (Of course, 21st century governments are so much different in their attitudes toward religion and God.  Right?)

    These first century Christians acted different from other “religious” people.

    HOW ARE CHRISTIANS DIFFERENT?

    WHY would a non-believer WANT to accept our GOOD NEWS?

    Learn a lesson from the first century evangelists.

    We are ALL the same WITHOUT Christ.  Yet ALL believers of every NATION are equal in CHRIST OUR LORD.

  • SEEK

    SEEK

    Mathew 7: 7 “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. 8 For everyone who asks receives; the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened

    SEEK – a word study preached by an Elder of our church today (18 August 2013)

    Here is a search from the 112 NIV references. I too was convicted to SEEK more.

    As additional study: an Old Testament search & a New Testament search.

  • Life Interrupts Life

    Life Interrupts Life

    LIFE INTERRUPTS LIFE.  It may be a marriage, a birth, a graduation, a job change.  It could be a death, a divorce, a disaster, an accident.

    In an instant everything of your mundane or over-stressed daily life comes to a halt and the life-interrupting event changes your entire perspective on this day.  Tomorrow will never be the same.

    Do you stop to allow a relationship of love for another person to interrupt your tireless routine?

    The pattern in the life of the Son of Man continually allowed for interruption as opportunity to glorify God through compassion for others.

    John 2: The next day there was a wedding celebration in the village of Cana in Galilee. Jesus’ mother was there, and Jesus and his disciples were also invited to the celebration. The wine supply ran out during the festivities, so Jesus’ mother told him, “They have no more wine.”

    “Dear woman, that’s not our problem,” Jesus replied. “My time has not yet come.”

    But his mother told the servants, “Do whatever he tells you.”

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    John 4: Jacob’s well was there; and Jesus, tired from the long walk, sat wearily beside the well about noontime. Soon a Samaritan woman came to draw water, and Jesus said to her, “Please give me a drink.” He was alone at the time because his disciples had gone into the village to buy some food.

    Pretty ordinary stuff of life.  Jesus and His Disciples are walking between towns. They have to stop for lunch and buy food.  Jesus is thirsty for a drink of water.

    The interruption brings Jesus to reveal to a Samaritan woman: “I Am the Messiah!”

    Rather than continuing back to Galilee, Jesus and the Disciples go with the interruption and stay in that village for two days.

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     Jesus continues to live an ordinary daily life as Son of Man.  He travels with other pilgrims to festivals in Jerusalem.  Miracles are just a moment in a crowded and busy day:

    John 5: “Would you like to get well?”

    “I can’t, sir,” the sick man said, “for I have no one to put me into the pool when the water bubbles up. Someone else always gets there ahead of me.”

    Jesus told him, “Stand up, pick up your mat, and walk!”

    You know the witness of the miracle; but other than that, in the life of Jesus and the life of one man who had been lame for a long time on every day of his life, it was just an interruption.

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    The examples are numerous throughout the Gospels.  The interruptions to Jesus schedule even include interruption of life to the point of interrupting death.  Jesus did this more than once.

    Jesus interrupts our thinking that life is burdensome or ordinary.

    Every moment has the possibility for a miraculous interruption of interaction in the will of God.

    A sudden and unexpected death… or a gradual, painful fading away: all of it is expected in one manner or another. No life is ordinary in the eyes of God.

    The pregnancy and birth, the courtship and marriage, the sickness and health: all are ordinary stuff of life in the eyes of God and the walk of man.

    Therefore let us be more like Jesus with a willingness to allow life to interrupt our daily life as we have seen it.  The Lord has a miracle for us; if not now, in His own eternal time.

    John 14: “Don’t let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God, and trust also in me. There is more than enough room in my Father’s home. If this were not so, would I have told you that I am going to prepare a place for you? When everything is ready, I will come and get you, so that you will always be with me where I am. And you know the way to where I am going.”

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    Life interrupts life.  As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be.  Expect it.

    Greet life’s interruptions like the One who interrupted the world with His loving interruption of hope.

    Matthew 24: 37 “When the Son of Man returns, it will be like it was in Noah’s day. 38 In those days before the flood, the people were enjoying banquets and parties and weddings right up to the time Noah entered his boat. 39 People didn’t realize what was going to happen until the flood came and swept them all away. That is the way it will be when the Son of Man comes.

    40 “Two men will be working together in the field; one will be taken, the other left. 41 Two women will be grinding flour at the mill; one will be taken, the other left.

    42 “So you, too, must keep watch! For you don’t know what day your Lord is coming.

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    P.S. The above post was not intended to be my first blog post.

    This is dedicated to my brother in the Lord, Vinny LaGuardia, who was murdered by a gunman who opened fire on this innocent man and others at a township meeting last night.  Vinny played drums for our praise band at Benders Mennonite Church and was a friend.

    Jesus Christ, our Lord will comfort Vinny’s widow, our dear sister in the Lord. We pray for his family, neighbors and many friends, and also the families of the others slain.  May the Lord have mercy on the soul of their killer.

    Roger Harned