Arise, cry out in the night, at the beginning of the night watches!
Pour out your heart like water before the presence of the Lord!
Lift your hands to him for the lives of your children, who faint for hunger at the head of every street.

Lamentations 2:19 ESV


Monday, September 24, 2018

The Police

The police came to church this Sunday—not to worship, but on an official call. We’ve had paramedics more than once, but I don’t remember ever seeing two policemen calmly walk down the aisle during the sermon to the front of the church.

The reason was that, early in the service, a homeless young man meandered down the rows of pews to the very first pew of the middle section. He was obviously dirty, and he was noticeably smelly, even from where we were seated near the back. Throughout the service, he moved around on that pew, occasionally standing or changing to the second pew. At one point, during the sermon, he even approached the chancel table in front of the pulpit—he laid a piece of paper there. It was obvious that he has “issues.” During this time, a member intercepted and redirected him more than once with only short-term results. It only made him agitated and, I was told later, belligerent.
 
As I watched this young man’s behavior, I prayed that the Lord would direct an angel to sit with him, arm around his shoulders, to help him settle down. I prayed the Holy Spirit would free him from the troubling spirit and power of the enemy. I prayed and wondered who else was praying.
 
Our church’s second service is broadcast on a local radio station, so the listeners would not have known what was happening. Our pastor kept speaking on Acts 1:7-8 out of which he had pulled two main themes from Jesus’ words that point to God’s sovereign will and love: God’s timing and God’s mission.
 
Time, both the quantity and quality, are fixed by the Lord and are under His plan and strategy. He owns both the process of time and the actual events of time. In fact, both belong to Him.
 
This truth is to give us confidence and spur us to be about our business which is His mission—the mission to do what we’ve been appointed to do through the power that comes from the Holy Spirit’s presence in us which is to take the same love and grace we’ve received and extend it to others.
 
So, I was saddened when the two policemen appeared to escort the young man out of the building and off the premises—I saw him later hanging out on the lawn of a nearby office complex. If our God is sovereign over time—both the when and the what happens, then this young man’s presence in church today was not a surprise to the Lord. Perhaps, even, one could say, we were set up.
 
With the sermon complete, the radio broadcast ended, and with the young man out of the building but not out of our minds, the worship director prayed for him. After prayer, many of us were wiping away tears. I pray it was the Lord’s Spirit at work awakening us. Today is the day to be grace extenders, to be about His mission.
 
We need your grace, Lord. And we need to desperately extend your grace.

 
You, therefore, my son, be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus.
2 Timothy 2:1 (CSB)


Tuesday, September 18, 2018

A Wasted Life


It was a fad a while back—WWJD, What Would Jesus Do? It was on t-shirts, on bracelets, etc. It’s a phrase that does call attention to a question, but there’s a bigger question that should be in our minds, one more encompassing than the situational WWJD. The bigger question is— “If Jesus were living my life, what would He be doing and how would He be doing it?” That’s a question posed by Mark Driscoll in his new book, Spirit-Filled Jesus.
 
It’s a question that asks not just “what” but “how.” And it’s a bigger question in that it steps out of one or two or three situations, or more, into your whole time of life-breathing on this planet.
 
That’s what is “eternal life”—the gift we are given when we place our faith in Christ Jesus. Mark Driscoll wrote that it’s “a quality of life that starts at the moment of your salvation, infects and effects all of your life, and culminates at your death. … Christianity is about living a new life from the moment you meet Jesus and receive His Spirit that continues forever and ever. If eternal life is the Spirit-filled life of Jesus empowering your entire life, then any day lived any other way is a wasted life.”

Mark didn’t put an exclamation mark at the end of that last sentence, but that’s a very impactful statement. Who wants “a wasted life”? Especially when you consider what Mark wrote later at the end of Chapter 1 of his book— “the Spirit-filled life with Jesus is so wonderful that even one day of it makes life worth living.” That’s what I want, don’t you?

A life worth living is a life that has value beyond its time spent in this land of the living. A life worth living has influence and leaves a legacy behind that is unlike the normal breath of air—here and gone. Instead it leaves a lingering aroma, just like today when I walked down a hallway and knew immediately another person had been there before me—their “fragrance” remained behind them.


I am enjoying reading an Advance Reader Copy of Mark Driscoll’s new book, Spirit-Filled Jesus, in which Mark shares insights from Luke that will help us live life in the here and now empowered by the Holy Spirit just as Luke repeatedly writes of in his Gospel.

The book releases October 2, 2018, but you can place a preorder now. Please go to the book’s website to find out more information: http://spiritfilledjesus.com/.


Spirit-Filled Jesus



[Just a note: I updated my blog title just to reflect more accurately why I blog, and it just so happens that the name “Deborah” has a great meaning in Hebrew. I grew up thinking it meant “bee.” Well, I learned that’s not really the case. It does come from the same root word. But for the ancient prophetess Deborah, it was a perfect name (I’m not a prophetess, just carry her name). The root word in Hebrew is a word that means to speak or pronounce—make sounds, like a bee does. But added onto the name is the “ah,” which is a reference to Jehovah. So, isn’t it cool that the prophetess’ name, Deborah, meant “one who speaks for God” or “God Speaks”? (Jack Cairns, Hebraic Roots)]