Be patient in affliction

There it is, Romans 12:12. One of the 3 instructions in this short verse. But so deeply challenging.

Paul doesn’t doubt it. It’s a given. Suffering is coming. So hold on, don’t back away under the trial, endure, bear with it a bit longer. Your positive approach to people, loving them with sincerity will not produce a perfect world for you. We are all sinners and capable of hurting anyone but further to this we all arty many difficulties with health and other seemingly impossible situations.

Jesus said we will have trouble in this world. But to take heart because he has overcome the world.

Today, you carry the name above all other names, even if you are not called Joshua.

The Apostle Paul tells us, “We always carry around in our body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be revealed in our body”. 2 Corinthians 4:10

A Saviour is one who intervenes, who steps in and rescues from either physical or spiritual suffering. We carry His name and His presence in our lives today. We may not have done much in our lives but He has done it all!

Believe that your Saviour can rescue you from your enemy’s hands: “My times are in your hands; deliver me from my enemies” Psalm 31:15

So in whatever affliction you are experiencing stay where you are today. There is in the suffering a hidden mystery. It is Jesus Himself. The impatient miss Him. They want it over with. They want to move on and move out. And in doing so they miss the fellowship of Jesus in the sufferings.

Being patient doesn’t mean you do nothing. It is not limbo. You are not wasting any time. You are active.

Sunday small thought: Be joyful in hope

This life and the set of circumstances that you are going through are not where your life truly abides. Jesus is more than a name. He is precious to you. You have surrendered your life to Him. You belong to Him. He is in your life and His presence is greater than the one outside of you. God gave you a new foundation of life and that is the exalted, victoriously ascended Christ.

So, ‘Be joyful in hope’, Romans 12: 12

On Ascension Sunday today we think of the disciples looking to the skies and seeing the Lord ascended they were filled with this joyful hope as they received this message: “‘Men of Galilee,’ they said, ‘why do you stand here looking into the sky? This same Jesus, who has been taken from you into heaven, will come back in the same way you have seen him go into heaven.’” Acts 1:11

So today let us all put our eyes on Jesus and not the circumstances outside or inside of us. We will see Him!

Work hard; Give it your all; for Him

Love will cause you to do things that you would never do. Love will cause you to work harder, run faster or even drop everything to go and be and do and with and for love.
Romans 12:11 “Never be lacking in zeal, but keep your spiritual fervour, serving the Lord.”
Never and always… for Him.

Paul doesn’t say what we should have zeal for. But it is in the context of our relationship with others. It is part of the list flowing from the title, ‘Love must be sincere.’
Work at it, with people, with your love, don’t be half-hearted, don’t be lazy in your approach. Even when your emotions say otherwise and even when you don’t feel like it. Never put up the drawbridge, never back off, never say “I’m not going to bother with that person anymore,’
But hold on. That just sounds like a lot of legalistic hard work!
But we have a positive alongside the negative. We have the always pairing with the never.

Always be boiling over in your spirit towards never backing away from people. It’s not just hard work that we are called to bring but our very heart, our feelings, fervency, passion for people. Don’t be disengaged from the inner enthusiastic desire to honour others above yourself. Do it with all your might, heart, strength, mind, put all of you into this life of loving with sincerity. Isn’t that something of the great commandment?
It matters whether you smile. Joy is crucially important. If you don’t have it pray for it.

Never and always, why? for Him

Your commitment to work at this with a passionate heart is done for no other reason but that of serving the Lord. Working hard has no value in itself; fervency has no value in itself; but both together done for that of serving Jesus, then that is the value. These 2 things hang on the greatest opportunity in the world, to do it all for Him.

Love must be sincere: outdo the others with affirmation

Do you know the experience of having that great idea but someone else gets the credit for it?

Have you been treated poorly but now have the opportunity to treat the same person a whole lot better?

Are you actually more deserving of gratefulness than the other person who you are now thinking of showing gratefulness to?

When the meal is finished in the restaurant are you more eager than anyone around the table to get the bill?

Do the opportunities to love with words and action come at the most inconvenient of times?

If so then you are very close to this next part of sincere love. Honour one another above yourselves, Romans 12:10

Honour: elevating someone else, high respect, esteeming them for who they are and what they have done.

In my culture we do this really well, when the person is dead. Not so much when they are alive!

We need to find new ways in fact many ways to bring honour to the person and their work.

We need to find the words.

We need to find the responses and the right reactions that will deflect from our thoughts and feelings to the elevation of the other. We need to become less …

Welcome to Philadelphia

The family in the home is one of the basic centres of the Kingdom of God. Before there was a Church there was a family, before there was anything created there was a family, before God was Creator or Saviour He was Father.

The home and the family was instituted by God, it is exalted in the Bible, it is the symbol of something greater, it is one of the main foundations of society and it is the primary influence on character development.

Yet we live today in a society where the family is threatened from all sides. The home is threatened. But the Church is here to restore the family. To not only repair it and stand for it but to become a family for the fatherless and the widow. The sincerity of the Church’s love is seen in its creation of family. “We are family here.” “Come and join the family of God.”

Love must be sincere: “Be devoted to one another in love.” (Romans 12 v 10) Or as the NASB rightly helps us, “Be devoted to one another in brotherly love.” The word Paul uses for love is philadelphia and it was used for the love amongst the family, hence, brotherly love. Paul is saying we should have devotion, tender family love towards each other. That is what we find in every Church, right?

I am sure we can all think of examples where we are devoted to that person in brotherly love. We can also think of those people who we struggle to love. They are the people who hurt you, spoken against you and who do not even like you never mind reciprocate any love you might have for them. How do we show brotherly love to these people? “… in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship. Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” v1-2.

Make the list. That’s who we are called to offer sincere love to. That’s who we show family love to. We need the Spirit’s help of course for we still have a long way to go to become like Christ.

But this is the battle the Church has to win. We must reveal philadelphia to a world who was robbed of that experience. “It doesn’t matter who you are; or how damaged you are; it doesn’t matter how hurtful or proud you have become; we leave all that to the head of the family, to the Father; our role is to philadephia you; that’s what you get here; welcome.”

Love calls us to say something, do something and be someone.

“Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is good.” (Romans 12 v 9)

“Nineteen young children and two adults have died in a shooting at a primary school in south Texas.” That’s what we wake up to this morning.

We cannot be silent about that. We cannot be numbed into a shrug of the shoulders.

Can we?

Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is good.

The Syrian refugee crisis had been taking place for 4 years before the world was shocked on 2nd September 2015 by a little 2 year old boy, Alan Kurdi, whose lifeless body, still wearing his bright-red T-shirt and shorts, was carried and laid face down on the beach not far from Turkey’s wealthy town of Bodrum. The Twitter hashtag that went viral was ‘humanity washed ashore’.

Surely this stopped everything. We couldn’t just carry on with our lives could we?

The world’s largest displacement crisis is still Syria 11 years on from when it started. More than 13 million people have been displaced.

Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is good.

If love is going to be sincere then we are going to have to respond.

We are not loving if we allow bullies to bully, killers to kill, rapists to rape, abusers to abuse.

We are not loving if we say nothing about the selfishness around us; the consumerism and greed in our society; the family breakdown in our neighbourhood; poverty, violence and racism; the list goes on; evil is here.

There is evil and there is good. It isn’t what we call it. It already exists. It was there before we were born and it will be there after we die. In order to demonstrate love then get involved with both. With the evil abhor it. Call it what it is. Take it on. Detest it enough to defeat it. With the good then cling to it. Paul uses the word in 1 Corinthians 6:16 for the uniting of 2 bodies into one. Be glued to the good. In all of the evils find the good.

The horror of December 2012 is etched in our minds when 26 school children were murdered at Sandy Hook. One 7 year old boy called Daniel, a victim of this evil, was unusually compassionate and always concerned for the special needs girl who he sat with in class making sure she was okay. When she would lose her glasses Daniel would find them. His parents clung to the good and launched a campaign called, ‘What would Daniel do?’ encouraging others to follow Daniel’s legacy of kindness.

Within the horrors of the Syrian camps is a father, Osama, who in being supported by the UNCHR is now able to support his family having been given 5 sheep. One of which gave birth so he has now six! “I’m happy because I can feed my family and sell the milk and cheese at the market,” he said, tenderly holding his young son.

Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is good.

Today let us not sit back. But let us get involved and let our love be sincere.

Real Love is seen, it cannot be hidden.

Love is all around me apparently, so the song tells me. I feel it in my fingers and in my toes. Apparently, though I’ve never watched, there is a new season of an island of love about to start on the TV. An island of love! That must be some island!

If you wanted to read everything on the internet about love then you would need to sit down in front of approximately 4,600,000,000 articles, so that’s 4 billion 600 million things to read today about love. Or you could just read these 4 words:

“Love must be sincere.” (Romans 12 v 9)

Love from the centre of who you are; don’t fake it. (Message)

Let love be without hypocrisy. (NASB)

Let love be genuine. (ESV)

Paul is about to list how love is seen. But it is seen. If it is real love it is more than words, it impacts, it changes the atmosphere, it influences for the good and it is more powerful than any evil.

Eva Mozes Kor had forgiven the Angel of Death, Josef Mengele. However her adoption of the grandson of Rudolf Hoss, the SS Commander of Auschwitz, revealed genuine, extreme and sincere love. “I’m proud to be his grandmother. I admire and love him. He had the need of love from a family he never had.”

Jung Jin-Wook and her husband had been Korean missionaries in Turkey since 2015, they were great evangelists. Then one day her husband, Kim, was attacked in the street whilst evangelising, he was fatally stabbed twice in the chest and once in the back. He was 41 years old. Later she wrote to her husband’s killer facing court: “I do not understand why you did this, but I cannot be angry at you. Many people want the court to give you a heavy punishment. But I and my husband don’t want this. We pray that you become worthy of heaven, because we believe in the worth of people. God sent his Son Jesus, who forgave those who persecuted him. We also believe in that and we pray that you would also repent of your sin.” It revealed genuine, extreme and sincere love.

The horrendous picture of the naked girl in 1972 running for her life with the other children from the napalm bombs dropped in the Vietnam War went global. But so did her genuine, extreme and sincere love in 1996 at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C when she forgave the pilot who dropped the bombs.

Demonstrate sincere love today, let it be seen, the world is waiting.

Wherever you are today and whoever you are with then the world is seeing the Church in you.

The reason why the Church is so effective in the world is because of the focus we give to what we do and that is to worship Jesus Christ. It is all for Him; everything came from Him and we are careful to do whatever we do, for Him. We want the world to see Christ not us.

“We have different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us. If your gift is prophesying, then prophesy in accordance with your faith; if it is serving, then serve; if it is teaching, then teach; if it is to encourage, then give encouragement; if it is giving, then give generously; if it is to lead, do it diligently; if it is to show mercy, do it cheerfully.” (Romans 12 v 6-8)

Why does Paul choose these 7 gifts? In his other writings he lists a different set. Are these a random list coming off the top of his head? Whatever the answer, the focus is not the gift, nor the one using the gift but it is either on Christ or His Church.

There’s nothing wrong in having courses on how to use the gifts; there’s nothing wrong in being able to recognise the gifts you have or call yourself by a title connected to the gift; but to use the gift for Christ, to use it for others and to do so with love is the whole point I think Paul is referring to.

The excitement of Church is surely when we see gifts such as:

Prophesying: helping people with past, present and future thoughts that are not our own subjective feelings but are from Christ and for the glorifying of Christ (that’s what our faith is all about).

Serving: being that hands-on deacon that stoops down to wash feet and puts the needs of others first so that Christ is seen and to do it all for Christ.

Teaching: opening the Bible so that others can see Christ and glorify Christ.

Encouraging: edifying, building, strengthening others to be all they can be, to be followers of Christ.

Giving: with no other motive but to be like Christ who gave His all, to do it generously.

Leading: do it the way Christ leads, not with manipulation or force but with love and demonstration.

Showing mercy: don’t look down on the disadvantaged, show them happiness and let the smile of Christ be seen through you.

This is the Church that Christ birthed. This is the exciting Church that Christ died for. Let’s step into this today.

Let’s give God all the glory for all that has happened in our life. It was never for us. It was all for Him.

As we look back on our lives as followers of Jesus we can see not only did He do it all, so we have no place to boast, but also it was all for Him.

“For just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, so in Christ we, though many, form one body, and each member belongs to all the others.” (Romans 12 v 4-5)

I am unable to purposely leave the community of Christ and keep connected to Christ.

I am unable to view life and make decisions accurately through my perspective only.

I am unable to claim any entitlement for I am not the body but part of.

However,

I am here by design with my own uniqueness and a worthy individual contribution without individualistic desire.

I am responsible for the care of others, their value and for their voice to be heard.

I am privileged for I have access to the whole body.

It is all for Him. Yet the benefits are many.