Heaven, Hope, and the Childbirth Motif (John 16:20-22, Genesis 3:15-16a, Romans 8:22)

John 16:20-22 – 20 Truly, truly, I say to you, you will weep and lament, but the world will rejoice. You will be sorrowful, but your sorrow will turn into joy. 21 When a woman is giving birth, she has sorrow because her hour has come, but when she has delivered the baby, she no longer remembers the anguish, for joy that a human being has been born into the world. 22 So also you have sorrow now, but I will see you again, and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy from you.

Genesis 3:15-16a

15 I will put enmity between you and the woman,
and between your offspring and her offspring;
he shall bruise your head,
and you shall bruise his heel.”
16 To the woman he said,
“I will surely multiply your pain in childbearing;
in pain you shall bring forth children.

Romans 8:22 – For we know that the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now.
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In the Garden of Eden, humanity began its rebellion against its Creator. Mankind sinned against God, choosing to throw off his loving commandments. We chose self-rule rather than following God, and we received for our crimes the due penalty for our transgression.

Since that time, all of humanity has lived under the curse of God. People get sick and die. People suffer evil at one another’s hands. People struggle against the natural world. Relationships are strained. Selfishness abounds. And all of this links back directly to Adams fall.

Yet, in the garden, God made a promise. It comes in the words of his judgment against the serpent. God promised one to come, one who would crush the serpent. This is the first sign that someone would arise, descending from woman, who would set right the wrong done in the garden. And most evangelicals understand this promise to be a promise of the coming of Christ.

What strikes me this morning is actually the text of John 16:20-22 taken in the light of Genesis 3. This weekend, lord willing, I will preach through John 16:16-33. But I will not take the time to make the point that is on my mind today as I review the passage.

Jesus, in predicting to his disciples their coming sorrow, uses an interesting illustration. The Lord Jesus is about to be arrested and crucified. In that time, the disciples will be greatly sorrowful, weeping and lamenting. They will feel great anguish as their Lord, the one they have followed for the last three years, is brutally put to death. But that sorrow will turn to great joy when Jesus returns from the grave, having conquered death and paid the penalty for the sins of all who will trust in him.

Now, here is the point on my mind. Jesus uses an image to describe the disciples going from sorrow to joy. The picture Jesus uses is that of a woman in labor giving birth. She hurts, but the pain is turned to joy when the baby is born. Similarly, the disciples will hurt, but the pain will be turned to joy. My thought is that this too can be connected to God’s words in the garden.

Immediately after the serpent was judged and the first glimpse of the gospel is given, God turns his attention to Eve. He promises Eve that he will greatly increase her pain in childbirth as a part of the burden she must bear for her guilt in the fall of mankind. So, in a very real sense, a sign of the curse of sin on humanity is the suffering and travail through which women go in childbirth.

Is it not fascinating that Jesus uses the reversal idea of joy coming after the birthing process is over to depict what his disciples will feel when they see him alive after death? Could we not make a larger application? From the time in the garden until the consummation of God’s Kingdom, humanity suffers. As Paul Says, creation is groaning in childbirth. But with the resurrection of Jesus and his finished work of atonement, our pains are being eased. With Jesus’ paying for our sins, we who know him no longer sit under the wrath of God. While we still feel the effects of the curse over the world, that curse is about to come to an end. Soon Jesus will return. Soon the curse will be put behind us. Soon we will rejoice as a mother rejoices at the birth of her child. Yes it is painful, but that sorrow will be turned to joy when we, the children of God, are gather together with the Lord to be with him forever. We will live in the presence of God, in full joy, apart from any lingering effects of the curse. What a glorious day that will be! What a glorious eternity stands before us!

Christians, let us not fail to keep our eyes on eternity. This hope is a hope that God wants us to feel. He wants us to see the joy that is set before us in Christ. He want us to long for the days of a life without sin, without suffering, without pain, and with the greatest possible soul satisfaction. God wants us to pray for his kingdom to come. He wants us to speed that day with our prayers and our faithful sharing of the gospel. God wants us to be heavenly-minded people. Let us look forward to eternity with the anticipation fitting the joy ahead.

Forgetting God (Jeremiah 2:32)

Jeremiah 2:32

Can a virgin forget her ornaments,
or a bride her attire?
Yet my people have forgotten me
days without number.
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So, you’re here, reading a Blog—a Blog by a pastor no less. It can’t be possible that the above verse has anything to do with us, can it?

It seems impossible that a bride would walk the aisle without dressing up. It seems crazy to think that she would simply forget to get dressed for the wedding, totally an impossible thought. Well, God says that it should be just as impossible for his people to forget him.

Do we? Do we live in this world and forget that we are under the watchful eye of a loving Father, a righteous Judge, an almighty Helper, a faithful friend? Do we forget that, even on the job, God is still our God and still totally our Master and our Sustainer? Do we slip into patterns that would make us look like people who have no God instead of being the people of God?

I certainly hope that, for you and for me, God would never be able to say that we have forgotten him. But I know that, if we are not careful, from moment to moment, we can lose our focus on the fact that He is the one by whom, through whom, and for whom we exist. Christians, put it before your eyes and in your mind this day that God is, and we are his.

Hard Questions PT 2

Click above to get the MP3 of part 2 of the “Hard Questions” panel discussion.

Here is what is included:

0:09:15- What should Christians believe about the Creation/Evolution debate?

0:17:40- How does God judge those who have never heard about Jesus? Can they be saved?

Questions from the Audience-

0:22:57- If the first chapter of Genesis is allegorical, how do we know when it becomes historical?

0:24:08- Do you believe that the Bible teaches that the role of a woman is to be a homemaker?

0:25:20- What should a father’s priority be?

0:26:09- What kind of resistance should Christians have to homosexuality in our culture?

0:30:12- Since humans are cursed and fallen, how can we trust our interpretation of the Bible?

0:32:05- How should Christians think about the death penalty?

Christians and the Economic Crisis: A Postscript (Hebrews 13:2, 5-6, 16)

Hebrews 13:2 – Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.

Hebrews 13:5-6 – 5 Keep your life free from love of money, and be content with what you have, for he has said, “I will never leave you nor forsake you.” 6 So we can confidently say,
“The Lord is my helper;
I will not fear;
what can man do to me?”

Hebrews 13:16 – Do not neglect to do good and to share what you have, for such sacrifices are pleasing to God.
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I simply want to add the above verses to yesterday’s discussion of a Christian’s appropriate response to the nation’s financial crisis. God calls us to be a giving, sharing, and caring people. He calls us to give and show hospitality. Who knows that he may not allow us to minister in very unique ways in this unstable economic time. For sure, we are to rely on him, trusting that he will care for his own.

I’m not trying to argue for us to be unwise. But I am wanting to argue that we should become more giving, less selfish, and less concerned with our own comforts at this time. Let us turn from worldliness to godliness. Let us show the world that God is worth more to us than anything on Wall Street. Let us give, love, show hospitality, and honor our God.

Hard Questions Panel Part 1

The audio is available for part 1 (the first hour) of our “Hard Questions” panel discussion from the campus of Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. This discussion includes answers from Phil Nelson, pastor of Lakeland Baptist Church in Carbondale, IL, Jonathon Peters and Mark Warnock, pastors at First Baptist Church of Columbia, IL, and yours truely.

If the title of this post will not work, visit www.lakelandchurch.org to find the audio yourself.

Here are the questions you will hear us try to tackle:

0:03:09- How did you become a Christian? What was your college experience like?

0:17:14- What makes you qualified to answer questions about God? Why should we care what you think?

0:20:00- How can we be sure that the Bible is the word of God?

0:28:45- How can we be sure that the Bible contains the right books?

0:36:55- If God is all powerful and all good, why does He allow suffering to exist?

0:49:13- Would it be hypocritical for a Christian to support a female candidate for elected office if they wouldn’t also support a woman as pastor of their church? What does the Bible say about feminism?

1:03:55- What does the Bible say about homosexuality? How should Christians think about the legalization of homosexual marriage in areas of our country?

Christians, Prayer, and the Financial Crisis (Proverbs 30:7-9)

Though I normally head my posts with the scripture passage we will ponder together, I wanted to place a thought in your mind to set the context before you read this one. How are we to respond to the “financial crisis?” There appears to be a bill on the table that the House might pass. Perhaps 700 billion dollars is on the way to soothe our economy in shambles.

But still, we need to think about how to look at financial issues. How should we look at the economy? What kind of prayer should we pray as we ponder Wall Street, failing banks, and gigantic gas prices? How about this. . .

Proverbs 30:7-9

7 Two things I ask of you;
deny them not to me before I die:
8 Remove far from me falsehood and lying;
give me neither poverty nor riches;
feed me with the food that is needful for me,
9 lest I be full and deny you
and say, “Who is the Lord?”
or lest I be poor and steal
and profane the name of my God.

When is the last time that you talked with any person who said that they want neither too much nor too little? I’d hazard that you do not hear such an answer from the lost and dying world. Sadly you probably do not even hear this answer from Christians very often. But the prayer of Proverbs 30:7-9 is a perfect Christian response to times of financial difficulty.

This passage is also a perfect answer to give to a person on the street who wants to know what you think of these tough times. Just picture it. You are in a local café, and a lost friend across the table brings up the subject of the struggling economy. Your answer, instead of bemoaning the horror of the situation and acting as though your life rises and falls with the stock market index and the price at the pump , is to say, “you know what, I’m turning to God in this time, and I’m praying that he will give me neither too much nor too little money. I do not want too little, because I do not want his name to be dishonored by me not having enough. I want him to show that he takes care of me and mine. And so far, he has never let me down. I also do not want too much money, because I do not want to become enslaved to money, greed, and material things. I do not want to pretend that I think I can live this life on my own. I want just enough, so that I can get by and show the world that my God cares for me.”

We need to be sure that we do not fall prey to the materialistic and selfish culture in which we live. Let us learn to pray Proverbs 30:7-9 and mean it. If we cannot, then we need to repent and ask God to help us to treasure him over any material gain. This is harder than you might think, because we seldom really look at our finances as a resource for glorifying God by having just enough. Let us become more giving, more loving, and more God-centered with our money.

A New Angle On Idolatry (Isaiah 46:6-7)

Isaiah 46:6-7

6 Those who lavish gold from the purse,
and weigh out silver in the scales,
hire a goldsmith, and he makes it into a god;
then they fall down and worship!
7 They lift it to their shoulders, they carry it,
they set it in its place, and it stands there;
it cannot move from its place.
If one cries to it, it does not answer
or save him from his trouble.
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When we think of idolatry, we think of people bowing down to statues, crying out to false gods. For most in the US, this concept has been totally removed from our sight. However, for those who have been in other countries, we have managed to witness idolatry in its traditional form first-hand.

The next way that we in the US often identify idolatry is to talk about things that we worship or focus our hearts on that are not God. We talk of making our televisions, our bank accounts, our jobs, or our popularity idols in our lives. It is not uncommon to hear a pastor pick up this theme and talk about contemporary idols that are not statues, but that are items sold at the finest of stores in our shopping malls.

I want to pick up one theme of idolatry that we seldom mention. It is found here in Isaiah 46:7. In a clear contextual discussion of people who are vainly worshipping a man-made statue, God says this: “If one cries to it, it does not answer or save him from his trouble.” This is an aspect of idolatry that I have seldom heard used in a definition of idolatry, but, if it is understood, it will open up our understanding of the things which we turn to in our lives that are truly idols. I mean this: an idol is something to which we cry for help or turn to for support that is not the Lord and is therefore unable to rescue us.

Take out the concept of materialism, add in the aspect I just pointed out, shake it around, and see what you come up with now for modern-day idols. It is not just a nice car or house. What do we turn to for support that is not the Lord? Where do we look for solace in our souls that is not able to save? Sometimes the idol may be a drug designed to ease our feeling of guilt though our guilt is there because of our sin before a holy God. Sometimes the idol may be the political process, as we mistakenly believe that the hope for the US is found in the right party being in power. Perhaps the idol is the US, as we look to the country as the source of hope for the world instead of the Lord being that hope. Perhaps the idol is a spouse whom we elevate to the position of savior, comforter, and helper in our lives instead of finding our worth and comfort in the Lord. Perhaps the idol is a pastor or Christian author upon whom we rely to change the hearts of the people instead of crying out for God’s Holy Spirit to speak to his people through his word. Perhaps the idol is a nicely-packaged program that we expect will really “draw people in.”

It would be wise for you to ask yourself this question: What do I turn to for help in my life that is not God? What do I rely upon in my world that cannot really help me? Any of the things you come up with may well be an idol. And Christians, let us be frank, God will not tolerate us giving his glory to idols. He will demand we remove such idolatry from our lives. Let us no longer rely on what cannot save. Let us find our help and our joy in the only One who is worthy to be our help and Joy, the Lord God Almighty.

Are Your Prayers Abominations? (Proverbs 28:9)

Proverbs 28:9

If one turns away his ear from hearing the law,
even his prayer is an abomination.
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How truly important is the word of God to the life of the Christian? How important is it that we read God’s word? How important is it that we listen, intentionally listen, when the word is proclaimed from the pulpit? Does it really matter if we are a Bible-based people?

Just take a look at Proverbs 28:9. All of us want our prayers to be effective. Even lost people pray. Even spiritually lukewarm people, on occasion, will toss up a prayer in a time of need, of stress, of suffering. And people, in general, think that, if they pray, they please God.

But God makes it clear to us in his word that not all prayers please him. Not all prayers are going to be answered in a positive way. In fact, some prayers are detestable to the Lord. And none of us want our prayers to be an abomination to God.

So, how do we avoid praying abominations? Listen to God’s word and obey it. The one who turns his ear away from the word of God does not have anything going on in his or her prayer life that is of any significance. Instead, his or her prayers offend God.

Christians, we need to be a people of prayer. We want our prayers to be heard as we pray for our lives, for our loved ones, for our nation, for the lost, etc. But if we want our prayers to be heard by God, we need to be praying as people who hear and obey God’s word. If we turn away from the Bible, if we ignore the scriptures, if we refuse to follow God’s commands, our prayers are abominable to God. Let’s not let that happen. Instead, let’s love God’s word, follow his word, and offer the kinds of prayers that are sweet to the Lord.

Beware Tricky Religious Speech (Isaiah 36:7)

Isaiah 36:7 – But if you say to me, “We trust in the Lord our God,” is it not he whose high places and altars Hezekiah has removed, saying to Judah and to Jerusalem, “You shall worship before this altar”?
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In our society today, many people use the word god to mean several different things. Oprah has a “god” about whom she talks. Many who claim Christ talk about god, but define him in ways that are contrary to the revelation of God in the holy scriptures. And many use religious language in such a way that Christians might have a genuine struggle knowing if the person to whom they are speaking really knows what he or she is talking about.

When Jerusalem was in danger from the attack of the Assyrians, the king of Assyria sent the Rabshakeh to attempt to convince the people of Judah to surrender their city. The whole point was to humiliate, deceive, or demoralize the people so that the Assyrians would not have to go through the trouble of the siege.

One of the tactics that the Rabshakeh tried to use is to convince the people of Judah that God was not on their side. He knew that King Hezekiah had commanded the removal of many of the high places that had been used for worship in ways that God had not commanded. Since the Rabshakeh only had in his mind the sort of commands made by the pagan gods of the other peoples around Israel, he assumed that the king had told the people to demolish places where God was genuinely worshipped.

In reality, the words of the Rabshakeh were exactly wrong. The high places were not commanded by God. In fact, the Lord had commanded that he be worshipped in Jerusalem at the temple, the place he chose for his worship to be performed. The high places were places where Israel had gone against the commands of God. The destruction of such places were Hezekiah’s acts of obedience to God, not acts of offending God.

One lesson that we should learn from this is to be very careful of the danger of being deceived by people using religious language. Politicians, philosophers, TV personalities, and people of almost any profession will sometimes resort to religious language to attempt to make their point, to be convincing, to show that they relate to the religious, or simply to sound spiritual. But just because a person says that he or she has faith, believes in a higher power, or even claims to be a Christian does not truly mean that the speaker really has the truth.

What shall we do? How do we defend ourselves against such tricky language? There is only one way, and that is to know God by knowing God’s word. God has revealed himself to us in his word. He has told us what he is like and what he expects. If a person claims Christianity or “God” in his or her speech, but the religion or standards that they set forth is inconsistent with or contrary to the revelation of God in the scriptures, such a person is not presenting truth. Either such a person is confused, deceived, or attempting to deceive; but such a person most assuredly does not present truth.

Take a warning from the words of the Rabshakeh. Lost persons will attempt to use religious language in order to deceive God’s people. The appropriate counter is to know the truth about God. The remedy is to know the Bible and to faithfully interpret it. God has revealed to us himself and his ways. He has not made this a subjective non-reality that is open for any number of variant interpretations. God has told us what he is like and what he demands; we must follow this teaching. We find God’s revelation in the Bible, and those who turn from the Bible, twist the Bible, or falsely interpret the Bible are not leading us to God, regardless of the religious language they use.

Bible Interpretation and Little Bo Peep

One of the most dangerous things that Christian teachers can do is to force symbolic meanings onto biblical passages. Forcing allegorical meanings onto texts that are not supposed to be allegory is simply taking license to make the text say whatever the interpreter wants.

John MacArthur illustrates this idea with a few laughs by offering an exegesis of Little Bo Peep.

http://www.spurgeon.org/~phil//sounds/bopeep.mp3