Ministry of Love

The intention of this blog is to share Biblical messages at least on a weekly basis. Any response is appreciated. I do not expect everyone to agree with my interpretation of Biblical passages. I will try to respond with love and thoughtfulness.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Great Minds, by John.

Great minds?

Why is it so many, actually not too many, great minds spend time trying to prove that God does not exist, or as the newspaper this morning reported, there is no need for God to be involved in creation? Stephen Hawking's new book, "The Grand Design" is due to be on the shelves next week. The article about it caused me to consider this phenomenon today. Hawking says that since a law of gravity exists, that the universe can create itself out of nothing. (That's not intended to be a literal quotation). He also says he does not believe in a "personal god." He suggests that the laws of science might be called god. (I didn't capitalize "god" because in either case, that is not the God of the Bible.

In the Bible, God simply states that He is. He is called by many names, but He never gives Himself a name. When Moses asked his name in Exodus 3:14, God said, "I am who I am." In John 8:58, Jesus also said, "Before Abraham was born, I am." The "YHWH YHWH," (the English equivalent of the Hebrew words), could be translated, "I will be what I will be." That may fit our belief about God better than just the present tense phrase since we believe He is in the past, present and future. At any rate, God has chosen not to reveal to us a name for Himself.

Have you perhaps wondered why God does not give us His name? I have many times. Perhaps He does not have one because names are usually given by others, and there was no other before Him. Perhaps He is far too immense in every way to be named. Perhaps our knowing a specific name for Him would only be a hindrance to worship and the evangelization of others. He has not chosen to tell us, and He does not have to, does He? Our whole belief system hinges on the word, "faith" rather than a name.

We do not have concrete proof, and all that Hawking, or any other great mind can do is admit that he can neither prove nor disprove God, or God's work. I think anyone without faith in the very real and personal God we know is to be pitied. We are not to disallow, overlook, or shun unbelievers. We are to help them believe, and I am constantly frustrated that I can't do a better job of helping others because these are the very people with whom God wants us to share our witness. He wants us to tell the world at large, and individuals in particular, that we have absolutely no proof that there is a God, but we believe (that's faith), and we are satisfied with our relationship with Him. As we seek God, we begin to actually experience His presence much like we experience of people close to us, and we develop a strong love for Him.

For us who believe, God has told us we can call Him Father. Romans 8:16,17 says, "The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God's children, then we are heirs--heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ, if indeed we share in his sufferings in order that we may also share in his glory." He has accepted us as His children and all wonders of heaven await us when our journey here is done.

I don't think I personally will ever get old enough to want to die. I've grown more and more attached to my earthly life. I'm aware my thought about that may change. I remember when my own earthly father said, "I don't know why God leaves me here. I am ready to go." In a few short months, he made the trip slipping out of this life and into the next in a restful sleep. I also remember on the cross Jesus said, "It is finished." He was ready to leave this life and return to the presence of the Father. Paul stated in Philippians 1:21-24 these words, "For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain. If I am to go on living in the body, this will mean fruitful labor for me. Yet what shall I choose? I do not know! I am torn between the two: I desire to depart and be with Christ, which is better by far; but it is more necessary for you that I remain in the body."

Paul's concern for others held a higher priority than his concern for his own happiness. Too bad more of us are not like Paul! Almost everyone who reads ancient history and the Bible agree that Paul was one truly great mind who had one great purpose. He lived to accomplish what he believed God gave him to do. His observation of the position of great minds is summed up briefly in I Corinthians 2:20, "Where is the wise man? Where is the scholar? Where is the philosopher of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world."

God states that He loves us and that He reaches out to us. He has gifted mankind with many great intellects, and many of them perform wonderful things for the good of mankind. Too often that same intellect leads them astray, but God still reaches out to all of us. The lowly, the poor and the despised make up the large part of the family of God. The old saw says, "You can't make a silk purse out of a sow's ear," but God can, and God does. In fact, Paul admitted he was a persecutor of

God's children before He met Christ and became a tremendous defender of the faith. Many of the rest of us ordinary folks have been made extraordinary from time to time. None of us is perfect, but all of us who trust in Jesus are being perfected.

A last thought, shouldn't we all be praying for the great minds of the world? Some are leaders in positions of power, but all of them affect the general population with their expressed thoughts. I believe we should.

Thursday, September 02, 2010

musings,09/01/10, Everyone's Blessings, by John

Some people think God only blesses those who trust Jesus for salvation, but that is completely untrue. Every good thing in this world comes from God whether we believe in and worship him or not. We seem to prefer to give the credit somewhere else. We give Bell the credit for the telephone. Edison gets the credit for incandescent lighting. Fulton got credit for the steam engine, and the list goes on and on.

Inventors work hard to accomplish their goals, and they certainly deserve credit, but all inventions use God's created materials. I am also pretty sure there is no good thing on this earth that didn't have a prototype in heaven, or perhaps only in the mind of God. I believe we should look about us at God's blessings even before we begin to invent. That might keep us from using His materials for purposes He did not intend. TNT might be a good example of that, and so might atomic energy. It is good, but it is so frequently used for evil purposes.

The reason I am so aware of God's blessings lies in my long past childhood. At a very young age, God blessed me with a diverse environment. A few steps from my back door, I could view terrapins, alligator snapping turtles, mud turtles, and blue-tailed skink lizards. I also saw toads and bullfrogs and their tadpoles. At the same time, I rejoiced watching red-tailed hawks gliding high up in the sky. Occasionally a four-lined garter snake slithered through our garden and once in a while a long, thin, bright green grass snake slipped along the willow branches. Mockingbirds, blue jays, brown thrush, and catbirds filled the hedges and apple trees in our garden. In the more open area beyond our house, I watched loggerhead shrikes pin grasshoppers to thorns on a black locust tree. The live oaks and pin oaks lining our front yard and the street held scanty nests of mourning doves, and just once I discovered a whip-poor-will on an oak his tail held flat against the limb and pointed toward the bole of the tree. His head turned upward. He was almost invisible. If his large dark eyes had not been open, I would have missed seeing him because he looked so much like the stub of a broken limb. All these things and many more too numerous to mention here were within 150 yards of the house where I was born. I didn't mention, for instance, the earthworms, centipedes, millipedes, the roller-bugs, black widow spiders, daddy long legs, and myriads of other multi-legged critters. Once after a big rain, I scooped up from the water next to the curb a large black snaky looking thing. It caught my attention because it constantly changed shape. My next-door neighbor was the head of the Natural Science Dept. at Delta State College. I took it to him, and he held the pint jar up to the light and identified my catch as a leech. I was probably five at the time and had never seen one before.
All of these things, many of which may sound icky to you, were God's blessings to me. I learned to appreciate the world by observation, and my family members taught me scientific as well as common names for God's critters. I learned to respect our environment. I tried to learn how they fed themselves, how they reproduced, and always wondered why God put them here. At that time, it didn't occur to me that Mosquitoes bore small amounts of various microscopic life forms such as malaria. I think those bugs may have helped the human race develop its immune system.

A lot of the time, I lived in a wonderful make-believe world where Tarzan ruled the jungle that lay behind our home. At other times, I traveled with Indians, and perhaps once or twice with Lewis and Clarke. Of course, it's hard to conjure up a mountain lion from a house cat. It was easier to see a bird dog as a wolf, and little green snakes could become huge Boa Constrictors in my imagination. God gave that ability to all of us, and it provides a wonderful, exciting world for a child. I could imagine a rail-runner lizard as a crocodile, but reality told me they never get near water unless forced when fleeing predators!

All these things took place in just one residential block in a small Mississippi town during the Great Depression, a town named after president Grover Cleveland. I never had time to be bored, and I didn't know a lot about blessings, but I certainly had a wonderful childhood!

I haven't found a promise guaranteeing happiness in the Bible, but I know now that God has given us everything we need to be happy. Some translate the Hebrew in Psalm 1 to say, "Happy is the man...." It is a statement of a person's being, not a promise. The same thing is true in the Beatitudes. Hapiness does not always result from living in God's blessing. I doubt that even Jesus was "happy" hanging in excruciating pain on the cross, and I doubt any of us is happy when we suffer even if it is for a good reason.

Joy on the other hand, is the second gift listed in Galatians 5:22,23 given to all of us who trust Jesus and live with Him. That passage says, "But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness.

Against such things there is no law." Joy overrides almost everything else that keeps us from being happy, doesn't it? Personally, even when I am in pain, God's creation sustaining itself all around me gives me joy filled with the peace He also gives. Politicians and their promises come and go in time, but God's good gifts remain, and so many of them are for all of us believers and unbelievers alike. In fact, I would think any thoughtful person would look at creation and say, "There must be a God behind all of this. I think I will seek Him!" And one of His promises is that you will find Him if you truly seek Him! The right way to do it is in Matthew 7:7,8; "Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened."