Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Are Christian Celebrities Any Better?

This magazine has had its share of Christian celebrities on its covers: Pastors of mega-churches, award-winning musicians, best-selling authors, you name it. We all love famous people - perhaps because we envy their success, or maybe because we are just curious whether they have flaws.

In the end, these flawed celebrities often disappoint us. Ten of the ministry leaders we featured on the covers of Charisma in the 1980s eventually endured embarrassing scandals. And two of the six mega churches we featured 16 years ago in a series called 'Outstanding Churches of America' disbanded because of moral failures.

What seems to glitter with success today may not stand the heat of God's refining fire tomorrow. What grabs the spotlight usually turns out to be a distracting sideshow.

Charisma Magazine, January 2002.

Monday, October 12, 2009

When All is Said & Done

When All is Said & Done

By Luis Palau

A 10-year-old girl made the following observation: "Heaven is a nice place to go, but nobody's in a hurry to get there." And, you know, she's almost right.

Why is it that many Christians aren't excited about going to heaven and seeing the Lord? Maybe it's because unless their lives change, when all is said and done they will have little or nothing to show for their lives.

Christians in our society have opted for the "good life." They go to church, read their Bibles, serve on church committees, tithe and don't do a single thing that will count for eternity. Why? Because they refuse to do the one thing that God has called them to do, and that is to love Him with all their heart and soul and mind and strength.

If we love God with every fiber of our being, then we will long to be with Him. We will say with the Apostle Paul, "For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain" (Philippians 1:21). Paul wasn't afraid to die because he knew that he had a glorious future awaiting him in heaven. And the exciting thing for us won't be the streets of gold, but that "God is with men" (Revelation 21:3).

In addition, if we love God with all our heart and soul and strength, we will do what He calls us to do. Love and obedience cannot be separated. The Lord Jesus Christ made this clear to His disciples when He said, "'If you love me, you will obey what I command'" (John 14:15).

What are the consequences of not heeding God's call on your life to serve Him as He intended? I found out one snowy January while preaching at a church in Schenectady, New York.

Before the meeting started, a rather distinguished looking gentleman with a cane entered the sanctuary, walked to the front of the church, introduced himself and asked to speak with me after the service. We arranged to meet at the home of the family with whom I was staying.

In the car on the way to their house, my hosts told me about the gentleman with the cane. "Now Luis," they said, "you need to know that this gentleman is one of the most distinguished ophthalmologists in the country. His textbooks are studied in many of the major universities. He's been away from the Lord since we were in university together, but something has been on his heart during the last few weeks."

At the house my hosts excused themselves so that the doctor and I could talk privately for a few minutes.

"Young man," he said, "I have a question to ask you, and based on the answer you give me, I'm going to make a big decision.

"I'm an ophthalmologist. I've made a lot of money. I'm well respected. Most people think I'm a success. But my daughter has no interest in God and my son is going to hell because I've never shared the Gospel with him. For years I've questioned how I've spent my entire adult life. Is that success?"

Then he explained further. "When I was in university, some 42 years ago, a missionary by the name of John R. Mott came and spoke about the need in the Middle East for ophthalmologists to help treat eye diseases, and I felt the call of God. When he gave the invitation, I made a commitment to go and serve Jesus Christ on the mission field. I made a commitment to use my medical skills for God's glory.

"But when graduation came, I married and my friends and relatives began to warn me about the dangers of living in the Middle East, the sacrifices a missionary must make, about foolishly wasting my education. They said, 'Don't do it.' And the pride of life got a hold of me and I never did go to the mission field. Instead, I started my own practice here in The States. That was 42 years ago."

Then he added, "And I want you to know, I haven't had one day of peace in 42 years. Now I'm retired and I've asked my wife to go with me to Afghanistan so we can finish our last days serving the Lord in mission work. I've said, 'Let's at least obey God at the end of our lives.' But she doesn't want to go, so tell me, shall I go or shall I stay?"

In typical Latin fashion, I put my arm around him and said, "Brother, I believe you should go."

He began to cry. "Thank you! I will go. God's been calling me for 42 years. This time no one is going to stop me."

Three months later I phoned the family I had stayed with in Schenectady. "How is the doctor doing?" I asked.

"Haven't you heard?" they replied. "He's off to Afghanistan, and his wife went with him. He's coming back to the States soon to collect medical supplies donated from some large companies to use over there. And he's as excited as he can be."

The next winter I had the privilege of returning to Schenectady. The doctor was there, as well. His body had grown so weak that he couldn't even stand up anymore. But on the inside he was very much alive.

"Come here," he said. "Give me one of those Latin hugs." After I greeted him, he told me, "The next time I see you, I'm going to see you in the presence of the King!" And a few weeks later, he went to be with the Lord.

What moved me about this doctor was the fact that for 42 years he had no peace because he rebelled against the Lord calling him to the mission field. When he looked back over his life, he realized that all his "great" accomplishments were worthless because he had not obeyed God's plan for his life.

What is our supreme responsibility as Christians on this side of heaven? To be a success? Yes, but a success in God's eyes. Henrietta Mears said, "Success is anything that is pleasing to Him." I agree. We please God when we commit ourselves wholeheartedly to doing whatever He calls us to do.

Someone once asked William Booth about the secret of his success. He thought for a moment, then started to cry. He said: "I will tell you the secret: God has all there was of me to have."

Does God have all there is of you to have? As the doctor from Schenectady discovered, it's not too late yet to follow God's will for your life, no matter how long you've neglected His call. It's not too late to please Him.

And what a beautiful thing it is when someone finally returns to the ways of God and is prepared to enter eternity victoriously.

Are you looking forward to heaven? Are you ready and eager to go? Imagine the Savior saying to you: "Well done, good and faithful servant! You have been faithful in a few things; I will put you in charge of many things. Come and share your master's happiness!" (Matthew 25:21).

When all is said and done, what will the Lord say to you?

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Being Transformed

If I looked into
a mirror and
saw my heart
instead of my face,
would i see
Christ's love
reflected there?
Would I warm to His
compassion and hope?
Would I recognise truth
wrapped in kindness?
Would I see God smiling back at me?

Susan Lenzkes copyright © 2009

The Character of God

You astound earthbound imagination,
great God of wonder and delight.
You created the knees to bow then
gave the freedom to choose.
You poured out justice on sin yet
spilled Your blood for sinners.
you fill the heavens with glory yet
light darkened souls with love.
You are everywhere at once yet
call humble hearts your home.
We bow in awe before such
immense majesty.
We rejoice forever in such
immeasurable intimacy.

Susan Lenzkes copyright © 2006

Friday, October 2, 2009

Modern Dance

As a young teenager I learned to dance, and I loved it. It was all in innocent fun, I thought, But it did not take long to realize how easy it is to flirt with danger, for much can be lost when touch and rhythm combine. Around that time I read an author who said something that at the time I thought unrealistic. But with each reading and observation I think he was right. Granted the language is a bit dated, but there is merit to what he said.
The tendency of modern dance is to the fine edge off the modesty of both young men and young women. A blacksmith can no more handle the tools of his trade without hardening his hands than a girl can be clasped in the embrace of promiscuous men and still keep her sensitiveness to the questionable and to the unclean. When we consider, therefore, the thousands that are engaging night after night in the modern dances, our wonder is not that so many go wrong, but rather that so many hold their footing upon such slippery places.
He buttresses this point in another context:
Take, for example, our stage folk. They are neither better nor worse to begin with than the average. They are just ordinary human beings. But they play at love-making so much that it loses all its sacredness. Caresses become cheap and common things to be dispensed to almost any passer-by. Such a girl, to use a figure from James Lane Allan, becomes like a bunch of grapes above a common path where everybody that passes takes a grape. He who takes does so without reverence and to his own impoverishment. In the golden coin of real and abiding affection such spendthrifts soon become utter bankrupts.(Clovis, G. Chappell, Home Folks)
Extracted from I , Issac, take thee, Rebekah by Ravi Zacharias.