Wednesday, July 24, 2019

See to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy, which depends on human tradition and the basic principles of this world rather than on Christ. Colossians 2:8 (Colossians and Philemon)

One of the prison Epistles, this letter to the Church in Colosse focuses on the Godhood of Christ. Pa insert a Risen Savior into their belief, while clinging to the security of other gods and practices. They looked to their false gods to ward off evil spirits and bad karma. Angels were considered intermediaries and mysticism was common. To believe that Christ defeated death is to be transformed from the things of this world and join in celebration of an everlasting, victorious state.

It wasn’t just as simple as, “Really!? That many gods?” The Colossians prided themselves on a deeper, and higher school of thought, blending Greek, Jewish and Oriental religions. Every spiritual base was covered and everyone was happy. BUT! God does not need addendums. He is the whole picture, The Creator of all things created, not a little piece of the puzzle.

Set your heart and mind on Christ, the invisible image of God. You need no other, He is sufficient.

Love, 

Gretchen

P.S. The letter to Paul’s wealthy friend Philemon is regarding Philemon’s slave that stole property and money and made his way to Rome. There, Onesimus became destitute and went to Paul. He finds salvation and must make amends for his crime. Paul encourages Philemon to accept Onesimus’ restitution, and for them to reconcile, not as master to minion, but Christian to Christian, just as we as sinner are reconciled to God.

Love Ya!

See to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy, which depends on human tradition and the basic principles of this world rather than on Christ. Colossians 2:8 (Colossians and Philemon)

One of the prison Epistles, this letter to the Church in Colosse focuses on the Godhood of Christ. Pa insert a Risen Savior into their belief, while clinging to the security of other gods and practices. They looked to their false gods to ward off evil spirits and bad karma. Angels were considered intermediaries and mysticism was common. To believe that Christ defeated death is to be transformed from the things of this world and join in celebration of an everlasting, victorious state.

It wasn’t just as simple as, “Really!? That many gods?” The Colossians prided themselves on a deeper, and higher school of thought, blending Greek, Jewish and Oriental religions. Every spiritual base was covered and everyone was happy. BUT! God does not need addendums. He is the whole picture, The Creator of all things created, not a little piece of the puzzle.

Set your heart and mind on Christ, the invisible image of God. You need no other, He is sufficient.

Love, 

Gretchen

P.S. The letter to Paul’s wealthy friend Philemon is regarding Philemon’s slave that stole property and money and made his way to Rome. There, Onesimus became destitute and went to Paul. He finds salvation and must make amends for his crime. Paul encourages Philemon to accept Onesimus’ restitution, and for them to reconcile, not as master to minion, but Christian to Christian, just as we as sinner are reconciled to God.

Love Ya!

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

He said, “Go and tell this people: ‘Be ever hearing, but never understanding; be ever seeing, but never perceiving.’ Make the heart of this people calloused; make their ears dull and close their eyes. Otherwise they might see with their eyes, hear with their ears, understand with their hearts, and turn and be healed.” Isaiah 6:9-10 (Acts 28-29)

In the custody of Roman officer Julius, Paul, Luke and Aristarchus set off for Rome to make Paul’s appeal to Caesar. A two-week storm ship wrecks him and all passengers alive and well on the Island of Malta. For the three months Paul is marooned, he heals and bears witness to the Good News. The Maltese people had not yet been exposed to the news of a Resurrected Savior. God once again revealed His plan to Paul in a dream and Paul was able to boldly encourage those around him.

When the weather finally cleared and Paul made his way to Italy where a Christian welcome greeted him.  In Rome he was placed under house arrest in his own living quarters with one single guard. He had freedom to preach to those who come in and out of his lodging. Included in these numbers were Jewish leaders. Some believe, others do not.  This frustrates Paul as he speaks these words, “It is the hope of Israel that I am bound with these chains.” Acts 28:20b But it is the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy that completes Paul’s calling to the Gentiles.

Without leaving the confines of his house, Paul boldly preached and taught about the Lord Jesus Christ.  He continued ministerial care of the churches he founded, writing the letters we know as Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Philemon and possibly Hebrews. It is generally accepted and tradition supports that Paul was finally acquitted and went to Spain but soon returned to Greece and Asia Minor. He was rearrested, taken back to Rome and beheaded under the persecutions of Nero.

From persecutor to proclaimer, Paul exemplified one who experienced Mercy and Grace and was not content until every human on earth heard the message of hope. His zeal and devotion continue to light the flame that guides a lost world to God’s loving plan.

Thank you Paul, for giving to the Lord,

Gretchen

He said, “Go and tell this people: ‘Be ever hearing, but never understanding; be ever seeing, but never perceiving.’ Make the heart of this people calloused; make their ears dull and close their eyes. Otherwise they might see with their eyes, hear with their ears, understand with their hearts, and turn and be healed.” Isaiah 6:9-10 (Acts 28-29)

In the custody of Roman officer Julius, Paul, Luke and Aristarchus set off for Rome to make Paul’s appeal to Caesar. A two-week storm ship wrecks him and all passengers alive and well on the Island of Malta. For the three months Paul is marooned, he heals and bears witness to the Good News. The Maltese people had not yet been exposed to the news of a Resurrected Savior. God once again revealed His plan to Paul in a dream and Paul was able to boldly encourage those around him.

When the weather finally cleared and Paul made his way to Italy where a Christian welcome greeted him.  In Rome he was placed under house arrest in his own living quarters with one single guard. He had freedom to preach to those who come in and out of his lodging. Included in these numbers were Jewish leaders. Some believe, others do not.  This frustrates Paul as he speaks these words, “It is the hope of Israel that I am bound with these chains.” Acts 28:20b But it is the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy that completes Paul’s calling to the Gentiles.

Without leaving the confines of his house, Paul boldly preached and taught about the Lord Jesus Christ.  He continued ministerial care of the churches he founded, writing the letters we know as Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Philemon and possibly Hebrews. It is generally accepted and tradition supports that Paul was finally acquitted and went to Spain but soon returned to Greece and Asia Minor. He was rearrested, taken back to Rome and beheaded under the persecutions of Nero.

From persecutor to proclaimer, Paul exemplified one who experienced Mercy and Grace and was not content until every human on earth heard the message of hope. His zeal and devotion continue to light the flame that guides a lost world to God’s loving plan.

Thank you Paul, for giving to the Lord,

Gretchen

Monday, July 22, 2019

The following night the Lord stood near Paul and said, “Take courage! As you have testified about me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome.” Acts 23:11 (Acts 21-26)

Within a week of arriving in Jerusalem with an offering for those suffering loss due to their conversion, strict Jews stirred rumors, incited fury and attacked and arrested Paul. He was taken into protective custody by the Roman authority. As the Jewish court system plotted to have Paul put to death, he asks to address those who are rioting, gave his testimony of dramatic conversion and argued Jewish history, doctrine and tradition. By doing this he turned his enemies on themselves. The Pharisees and Sadducees do not agree on anything except their denial of Jesus’ resurrection and now Paul takes their vast knowledge and uses it to deflate their arrogance among each other. Still fearing he will never leave Jerusalem alive, God shows up, makes His plan known.

Under arrest, Paul is stretched out to be flogged and questioned.  He made his Roman citizenship known, as a Roman he had rights beyond the Jewish legal system. He is removed from Jerusalem, taken for safety’s sake to Caesarea and held in Herod’s palace by the Governor Felix.  Felix goes to Paul often and hears the Gospel, but he is really looking for a bribe. He neither accepts Christ as Savior or pads his pockets, but two years come and go before Festus replaces Felix. Festus finds no guilt when again Paul gives account of his Jewish heritage, conversion and commitment to carry the Gospel to the Gentiles. Paul makes his appeal to Caesar but Festus cannot send him to Rome without a written accusation and so, Agrippa II is consulted. Agrippa is the son of Herod the I who martyred James, brother of John. His grandfather was Herod Antipas the murdering leader who had John the Baptist beheaded and mocked Christ as He faced execution. It gets worse, Agrippa’s great-grandfather was Herod the Great who had all baby boys of Bethlehem put to death to safe guard his throne. But wait…There’s more!  Agrippa is living in an incestuous relationship with his sister, Bernice. 

Luke accompanied Paul throughout his trials and writes his Gospel. He has time and opportunity to interview first hand witnesses and Apostles, including Mary the mother of Jesus. What a valuable time these years proved to be. The Gospel spread. Even though the feet that carried the Word were stilled by shackles, the voices echoed over the world. The very worst of humanity heard the Salvation story. Many did not accept, but they were given opportunity by a loving God who makes a way to do the impossible!

Love,

Gretchen

Sunday Stories, July 21, 2019

It was obvious very early on, my oldest child loved dirt and her grandparent’s farm. She testified to her delight in soil’s smell and texture and spent many happy hours in the garden with her grandmother planting and coaxing things to grow. Today she still plays in the dirt working for the University of Arkansas Extension Service in crop research. However, there was one big issue in her dawning dirt days.  Her favorite place to play was around her grandparent’s mailbox, close to the road.  The texture of pulverized rock, dried leaves and other earthy stuff was the consistency of talcum powder and at every opportunity, Leah packed her toys and headed for the corner of the driveway.  The problem with this playground was the traffic flying down the straight, one mile stretch of country road. We warned her of the danger and punished her each time she was found in her favorite pile, but nothing deterred. So, it was day after day of yard guard to keep her safe.

One afternoon, grandfather came in from the hayfield looking for a shovel. He had hit one of the laying hens with the tractor tire and needed to dispose of the crushed carcass.  I asked if I could have a moment and took Leah to the scene of the crime.  While showing her the dead chicken I explained all death encompassed. The clucking was forever silenced, no worms would be eaten ever again and the baby chicks had no mother. Upon burial, everything from feathers to beak would decay back into dirt. I wanted desperately for her to understand the finality of death and the consequences of an encounter with a motor vehicle. Success was had. Leah never again went to play in the road.

It was said I taught a gruesome lesson on death that day.  Rather, it was life I was teaching and fighting for. I did not want my child to suffer the same fate as that barnyard fowl and so I introduced a harsh reality for her to understand and consider.  She did and changed her behavior. 

There is only one thing I ever hope to achieve; life eternal, for myself and everyone else I can encourage to believe. And! I’m willing to discuss ugly realities and wages of sin. There is a Heaven and there is a hell. One or the other will be your destination, there is no other option.

But the cowardly, the unbelieving, the vile, the murderers, the sexually immoral, those who practice magic arts, the idolaters and all liars—they will be consigned to the fiery lake of burning sulfur. This is the second death.                                                                            Revelation 21:8

And this is the testimony: God has given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whosever does not have the Son of God does not have life.

I John 5:11-12

It is instinctive kindness that desires to say, “Everything will be okay.” It might not be so. When someone dear is in spiritual danger, fight for their life! For this is true love.

Blessings,

Gretchen

Saturday, July 20, 2019

In everything I did, I showed you that by this kind of hard work we must help the weak, remembering the words the Lord Jesus Himself said: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’ Acts 20:35 (Acts 20-21:14)

Paul knows the anger and antagonism against him is growing. He is leaving Greece, headed to Jerusalem to take the benevolence offering he has gathered. It is important that he go because the Jewish Christians believe he favors the Gentiles, but by this act he wishes to unite them in love.  His good byes are emotional as he does not expect to see these friends again. Twelve years of missionary work are ending.

This message to the Ephesian elders is the only address Luke, the author, heard Paul give first hand. Paul clearly sees the troubles the Church will have and gives appropriate warnings. Revelations 2:2 shows these leaders heeded Paul’s words.

Determined to complete his mission, Paul finally turns toward Jerusalem. His physical future is uncertain, but his spirit is secure in the work of the Lord’s Gospel.

Never grow weary of doing good and giving. It’s what Jesus did, and would still do today.

Love,

Gretchen

Friday, July 19, 2019

I urge you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and put obstacles in your way that are contrary to the teaching you have learned. Keep away from them. For such people are not serving our Lord Christ, but their own appetites. By smooth talk and flattery they deceive the minds of naive people.  Romans 16:17-18 (Romans 13-16)

Having given direct instructions on Christian conduct, Paul now turns to living peacefully in community with believers and nonbelievers. Not an easy task for a people set apart from the standards and motivations of this world. He instructs Christians to submit themselves to civil government because all earthly dominions are allowed by God.  This does not condone possible evil conduct, but places them in the cosmos of God’s created order. The Church is not tasked with building roads, amassing armies and erecting prisons, so we must gladly pay taxes so these benefits and more can be sustained. There will be times when Christian integrity will conflict with government. Many believers around the world worship and protect the marginalized in secret, knowing they could suffer severe consequences if found out, but they are willing and we must all consider there may come a time for a similar choice (Acts 5:29). God promises that Satan and all wickedness will one day be crushed. Be careful who you hitch your wagon to.

The diverse Roman congregation was faced with issues that offended the Jews but not the Gentiles and it was serious to communal peace.  Meat sold in the markets was most likely sacrificed to pagan gods. This was a huge offense of the Jews, but the Gentiles ate without a thought.  Paul directs them to be considerate of each other, absenting judgement toward one another in anything.  This carried into all aspects of life. We are given great freedom as Christians, but it is a BIG responsibility. Our privileges must never oppress or antagonize anyone. Paul iterates that one’s personal rights should never compromise healthy, functional relationships with our neighbors.

Paul closes his letter with greetings and commendations to friends and shares his plan to visit after he delivers the offering from Macedonia to those hurting in Jerusalem. In teaching the nature of Christ, he taught the value of Christian love and friendship. It is not our place to create distress and disfunction.  All sins committed are against God and He’s got everything under control and in His time, so we are fully free to love.

Have a Great Weekend Eve,

Gretchen

Thursday, July 18, 2019

For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you confess and are saved. Romans 10:10 (Romans 9-12)

The Jews were zealous for The Law, but not the Messiah that actually came to fulfill it.  They rejected Jesus at every point and were bitterly antagonistic toward all who delivered the Good News. This broke Paul’s heart to the point he would have given his own soul to change his nation’s behavior. As he writes to the Messianic Jews and Gentile converts in Rome, he addresses, works verses faith and God’s sovereign authority contrasted with man’s free will and righteousness of the heart.

In Chapters 9-11 two theologies collide. God is absolute and has complete control over His creation. It is His right to allow and disallow at His pleasure. However, man was created with free will and God does not restrict or interfere with this gift. Both doctrines are plainly taught and so, we must except we will not clearly understand until there comes a time of complete clarity we do not have today. Paul speaks of seeing in a glass darkly. In other words, as we look through a window into darkness, we see a back lit past of a world going on around us, and a mirror reflects an exact moment, but neither gives answer to the future. Forward we step in faith, knowing God is already there, for He is not bound by our limitations of time.

And just when it seems we will never understand…… BAM! Paul hits us with chapter 12! His words echo Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount and ends the theological discussion by setting forth the manner of Christian Life. All we can and will do, depends on the Mercy of Christ and the transforming power of the Holy Spirit.

It comes down to humility of heart. We must become less so others can be more, as we are nothing but what God designed us to be, A Reflection of Himself to a dark and lost world.

Love,

Gretchen

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Christ Jesus our Lord. Romans 6:23 (Romans 5-8)

God has done what The Law could not. He set us free from the control of man’s sinful nature.

Paul uses the language of the Jewish judicial system to illustrate the work of Grace that is God’s alone. In the Jewish court system there are only the accused, the accuser and a judge, no litigators. When the judge hears all evidence he finds the party guilty or he acquits. The person acquitted is described as ‘justified’ or ‘righteous,’ not as a moral statement, but as their status before the judge.

Adam, one man, brought sin into the world by a single act of disobedience, and doomed us all to death. Jesus’ one act of righteousness has made our acquittal available and life eternal is ours, free for the asking. Through faith, we are justified by God, our Judge.

We are not only the recipients of life ever lasting, but we can exist today, in peace, with hope, through the presence of the Holy Spirit. He is active and alive in everyone who choses to believe. Through this we can be like Christ in character and restored to our original, created likeness to our Father. Do not be defeated by your instincts and past sins. You are so much more than that; a new creation with infinite hope.

Love,

Gretchen

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

What does the Scripture say? “Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness.”  Romans 4:3 (Romans 1-4)

The Roman Empire of Paul’s day stretched from Britain to Arabia. It was wealthy and  cosmopolitan. Their engineering feats made travel safer and swifter than ever before and all those new roads lead to Rome.  On the Day of Pentecost many of Rome’s citizens were in Jerusalem, heard the message of salvation and believed. They returned home and continued meeting together and growing in faith despite horrid persecution. Paul was passionate to go see and minister to these people who lived in the cesspool man’s sin and depravity, but first he had to deliver the benevolence offering to those suffering in Jerusalem and he wasn’t sure he would escape alive. A woman named Phoebe was traveling to Rome and could deliver correspondence, so before he left Corinth he penned this letter, a complete explanation of the nature of Christ, so the churches in Rome would not be led astray or waver and could continue to grow in grace.

All men are sinners.  We know this through the Law of Moses, but it is not this Law that makes us righteous. The Law is for knowing the will of God and recognizing we fall far short in our endeavors of self authority and power.  Through God’s Son we are given Grace that justifies us in the perfect judgement of God. Instead of a death sentence for our transgressions, we are given Mercy and on the day when our heart and life’s practices are laid bare for all to see, God will find us righteous if we have believed and lived accordingly.

Paul reminds those who cannot reconcile the Law with Mercy and Grace and instead, look to works for their security, that Abraham was first found righteous and then chosen by God, and finally, circumcised as a means of setting apart. We are not called to change our bodies, but to live differently than the pagan world around us. There is only one way to the Kingdom of God and it is through a faith that changes us for Heaven’s glory.

Zigging When the World’s Zagging,

Gretchen

Monday, July 15, 2019

Out of the most severe trial, their overflowing joy and their extreme poverty welled up in rich generosity. II  Corinthians 8:2 (II Corinthians 8-13)

The Church in Jerusalem, the place where it all started and so many came to believe, was struggling financially. In the years that followed Pentecost, many Jewish converts were cut from their families and often lost their jobs. These believers were suffering in poverty for their faith. Paul encouraged the Gentile churches in Galatia, Macedonia and Corinth to send assistance. They did! And they left us a very detailed instruction on how we should respond to the needs of the church and those around us.

These self supporting churches soon took on benevolent causes, and sponsored missionaries. The offerings were voluntary, proportionate, systematic and above reproach in their administration. Paul commends them for their kindness and sacrificial offerings, even among the very poorest of people.

In giving, the early Christians learned the blessing of honoring the parent church in Jerusalem. Christian giving is a loving response to the example given to us in the total sacrifice of Jesus Christ.  Jesus left all the riches of Heaven to become poor and make a way for us to walk the streets of gold without ever counting the cost.

Happy Monday,

Gretchen