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Showing posts with label everlasting life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label everlasting life. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 September 2015

'A NEW COMMANDMENT'


Rev. Brian Wilkie
By Rev. Brian Wilkie                                                                                    

Pastor of St. Andrew's Christian Community
Rockland, Ontario


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PODCAST LINK to CFRA broadcast - Sunday, September 20th, 2015:

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Broadcast Notes:

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‘A New Commandment


For today’s show I want to mention a particular person who has been a great support over the years to our program, and unfortunately I have to do this in memory of him, because Reverend Mel Newman died on July 12 of this year. We’ll be missing his encouragement, his support and his wisdom, as he’s been a great servant of the Lord through the years, and we’re thankful for the great hope that we have in Jesus Christ for the resurrection of the dead and that Mel will receive his reward with the Lord.

Today I want to address the topic of the new command that Jesus gave to his disciples.  He addressed his disciples on the evening of his crucifixion, and he spoke to them about many things, but this is one of the parts of what he said after Judas had left to go and betray him
"Jesus said to the disciples, 'Now is the son of man glorified and God is glorified in him.  If God is glorified in him, God will glorify the son in himself, and will glorify him at once.  My children, I will be with you  only a little longer.  You will look for me, and just as I told the Jews, so I now tell you.  Where I am going, you cannot come. A new command I give you.  Love one another as i have loved you, so you must love one another.  By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.'” 

This was the scripture from the gospel of John 13:31-35, and in it Jesus announces a new commandment for his disciples. 

Now throughout the teachings that he gave through the Gospels, at the Sermon on the Mount in the gospel of Matthew, at various teaching places throughout Mark, Luke and John, Jesus expands upon the law of God that was given to Moses for the people of Israel.  And he insists that he’s not there to destroy the law.  In fact he says that not one jot or tittle, not one dot on an I, not one crossing of a t, will be forgotten from God’s law until he comes again. So he completes the law and he actually strengthens the law.  From a law that focused very often on the external things we did,  Jesus presses into the motive.  He takes the command about not murdering someone, and he says, 'But if you’ve been so enraged by your brother.  If you are harboring in your heart a thought of anger or a thought of hurt for someone because of your anger, then you’re already breaking that command.'

He said about faithfulness, he said that not only should one not physically commit adultery, he said that if you look at a woman in lust, you’ve already broken the law.  And so he tells us to take the law a little deeper, a little farther, in terms of not just loving on the outside, of not just being ship-shape with the externals, but looking into the heart.

He speaks sometimes about not washing just the outside of the cup and leaving the inside of the cup dirty .  Can you imagine that if your dishwasher cleaned up the outside of the cup but all the leftover drink or food or whatever was in the dish remained in there getting disgusting, day by day.  It would be foolish to wash the outside and not the inside, and Jesus does the same thing with the law.  So he really doesn’t add to the law until he comes to this place.  He expands upon it, but here he introduces a brand new command, and I’m going to suggest that he couldn’t have given this command any earlier in history or in his life.

We’ll take a look at that in a few minutes.  But first I’d like you to hear with me, the Glen Campbell song, You Ask Me How I Know … this is from his album the Inspirational Collection, and I invite you to listen to it with me.


When we look at the new command of Jesus, we come to the whole question of how much Christians are expected to live by the direction of Jesus.  I know that it should be obvious.  We say that Jesus is Lord and there’s no one above Him, no one beside him, no one beyond him.  That he is the one that directs our lives and that we ought to be able to say, our lives are completely devoted to him.  But we so often fall short of that, that  we may start to wonder just how good do we need to be. Well, Paul addresses the people of Thessalonica when he writes to the Christians there and he says,

“Finally brothers, we instructed you how to live in order to please God, as in fact you are living .  Now we ask you and urge you  in the Lord Jesus to do this more and more.For you know what instructions we gave you by the authority of the Lord.   It is God’s will that you should be sanctified; that you should avoid sexual immorality; that each of you should learn to control his own body in a way that is holy and honourable. Not in passionate lust like the heathen who do not know God, and that in this matter no one should wrong his brother or take advantage of him.  The Lord will punish men for all such sins, as we have already told you and warned you. For God did not call us to be impure, but to live a holy life.  Therefore, he who rejects this instruction does not reject man but God who gives you his Holy Spirit. 

“And now about brotherly love: We do not need to write to you. For you, yourselves, have been taught by God to love each other, and in fact you do love all the brothers throughout Macedonia.  Yet we urge you to do so more and more. More and more.  Sometimes we can beat ourselves, goad ourselves to try and do more and more.  And wonder where it might end.  What does it mean to live a holy life? What does it mean to be sanctified, set apart for God?   

Sometimes we wonder how much can a human being do?  How good can a human being be?  We will say to ourselves, well, I’m only human. And in that way think that we’re excusing sin in our lives.  But here’s the thing, we need to know exactly how good a human can be, and we need to know something related.   

God is asking a lot of us, when he asks us to love in the way that He has called us to love.  And what’s the measure of how much he’s loved us. In this new commandment Jesus gives, we see an inkling about the answer to both those questions.  You see, God has told us to love one another.  He’s given us examples in his law about what love will look like when it’s played out.  He’s also given examples in parables and teachings to show us how to love one another. He’s told us a lot.  He’s instructed us through generations, and yet this new command comes after all those thousands of years of leading the people of Israel.   

Centuries of instruction, of training and discipline, and now we come to a new command, to love one another as he has loved us.  You see this command couldn’t  have come any sooner in history or in Jesus’ ministry, because we don’t know how God has loved us until we see Jesus’ life played out before us, even to the point of the cross.   

The measure of his love is expressed to a degree in his faithfulness through all the generations.  The measure of  his love is expressed to a degree in the that care he’s given to the people of Israel.  The measure of his love is expressed to a degree in his healings, in his teachings, in his patience with his disciples.  And yet the full measure of his love is not known until we see his greater love, of laying down his life for his friends.  Jesus says precisely that to his disciples so that they will understand what he’s about to do. Greater love has no one than this, that a man should lay down his life for his friends.  And yet Paul tells us that in laying down his life, Jesus was doing something greater than the love that we’ve seen in anyone before.  For Paul says, you know  for a good person, one might possibly lay down one’s life.  But God showed his love for us in this, that while we were still sinners, still enemies of God, Jesus laid down his life for us, as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.  So, Jesus has now set a new bar.  What is this love that he calls us to give to each other. It’s the love that lays down our lives, just as God has laid down his life for us.

How close can we come to living out this love?  We’re only human. Well, here’s the thing. Our scriptures teach us that Jesus Christ was fully human; fully human. That means that he was tempted in every way. That means that he got hungry and weak.  That means that he got hungry and thirsty. In fact, he experienced every kind of hardship that we ourselves faced. He faced rejection from his friends, from his own mother who came with some of his brothers and said, Jesus you need to come away and take some time apart, because they thought he was going mad.  He faced rejection by powerful people.  He faced thanklessness and ungratefulness from people that he had helped, whatever you’re going through, whatever loss you might have experienced, you can be sure that Jesus Christ knows not from a distance, but from his own life. And yet, (the) scripture says that Jesus was without sin.  Jesus did not sin.  How is it possible that a human being, born in the flesh, growing up under human guidance from his mother and Father, living in a broken world.  How is it that Jesus was able to live a sinless life.

Well, we’ll take a look at that in more depth and we’ll take a look at what that means for how we can love one another after we listen to this next song, which is from Mark Schultz.  And he prays to God, Give Me Jesus.  This is from his album, Simply Hymns.

Jesus our brother, who shared with us human weakness, lived a sinless life.  He always deferred to his Father.  Whenever he wanted to go and be by himself he went actually to be with his Father.  He said over and over again that he didn’t do anything on his own, but only what His Father in heaven told him to do.  And perhaps we’re afraid to be as committed to the Father as Jesus is.  Perhaps we don’t trust God entirely.  Perhaps, rather than being merely human, the problem is that we are of little faith.  We don’t trust God’s way.  We can see in Jesus’ life that when he put himself fully into the care of the Father, that the Father was ready to help him, support him, and lead him all the way.  Did his life always lead him down a flowery pathway?  Did he always experience wealth and prosperity and all those things that so many people want to promise?  No.  Jesus did suffer hardship in following his Father.  But his Father was always faithful to him.  He could love and give his life.  Not just on the cross but daily as he called his disciples to, because his Father held his future in his hands.  Even when he went to the cross, the scriptures tells us that it was for the glory set before him he endured the cross.  He trusted that his heavenly Father would make something of his death.  He trusted that his heavenly Father would receive him into everlasting life, as he had shared that everlasting life with the Father for all eternity.  He trusted the Father and showed us that we can do the same. 

There’s even a hymn that suggest that his death of course was for us, and the grave of course was for us and the resurrection was for us;  a demonstration for us of God’s great love.  And it was Jesus coming back to life to continue his gift and his service to humanity of salvation.  And he ascended into heaven for us and he sits on God's right hand for us and intercedes with him for us.  Jesus was fully guarded and kept by his Father, even through the sacrifices that his love called him to make. 

If we want to obey the command to love as Christ has loved, we need to trust God as Christ has taught us, as Christ has shown us.  There’s so much more to loving one another as Christ has loved us,  of actually laying down our lives, both metaphorically, for the most part.  But day by day, giving of ourselves, trusting our Father who sees what is done, will take care of us in the end.

Can we love as Christ has loved?  Not without the same help that Christ had.  Because he was not alone, He had an unbroken relationship with his Father from the beginning. And he has given to us a restored relationship with God, and given us his Holy Spirit so that we can share in the power and the trust and the faith which only the Spirit can give.  We need to lean on God more in order to obey him more.  We need to accept his help and as we live by his word.

Well that’s our message for today and I hope that you will continue in prayer as you consider this call to love as Christ has loved.

Let me pray with you right now;

O mighty God we do pray that you would show us that your burden is in fact a burden that is easy, able to be carried, especially since we share the yolk with you.  Lord, help us to trust you and to obey you, and Lord, help us to rejoice in the great gift you have given us in Jesus Christ.  Amen

Last song....Love take me over ... this is from the album the Glorious Unfolding by Steven Curtis Chapman

Rev. Brian Wilkie
St. Andrew's Christian Community, Rockland, Ontario
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To listen to the above broadcast, click on the following link:


Sunday, 14 October 2012

‘ENCOUNTERING THE LOVE OF GOD’

Rev. Brent Russet

By Rev. Brent Russett
Pastor of Sunnyside Wesleyan Church in Ottawa: 
http://www.sunnysidechurchottawa.com/                

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PODCAST LINK to CFRA broadcast - Sunday, October 14th, 2012:
http://proxy.autopod.ca/podcasts/chum/6/8985/good_news_022_oct14.mp3
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Broadcast Notes:
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‘Encountering the Love of God’

            Good morning. This program is sponsored by “Good New Christian ministries” Box 184 Rideau Ferry, ON. KOG 1WO. This is Brent Russett speaking. I am one of a team of four that get to share God’s good news with  you, every Sunday morning at 6:30 a.m. I grew up in the Ottawa Valley, and I have pastored in Ottawa for 22 years.

            One of the pleasures I have had in the last 22 years is to see people really encounter God. When we encounter who God is, it has a way of changing us. This morning I want to talk with you about “Encountering the Love of God”.

            Before we go there let’s hear from....

Music – Sandi Patti – Let there be praise – track 1 (3:03)

            I remember when I was a kid our family took a trip out west. We went to visit my aunt and uncle in Edmonton. My parents were quirky that way – there was no point of taking a holiday unless you were going to visit someone.

            So we drove and we drove and we drove to visit my aunt and uncle. After we had visited them we thought, we are so close we should go and see the Rocky Mountains.

I had heard descriptions or the Rockies. I had seen nature documentaries on our 20 inch rabbit ear driven black and white tv. You know the kind of documentaries. The helicopter flies around and through the passes of the rocky mountains. They looked pretty good to me on our black and white television.

On our trip we drove past the foothills and then for the first time in my life I encountered the Rocky Mountains. They were blow me away beautiful.

            I had seen them on my black and white tv but this was jaw dropping, eye popping, awe inspiring amazing. As we drove from Jasper to Banff, it was look at that – look at that, do you see the colour of that water. Look at the size off that one.
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            This morning I am hoping to take you for a drive into the heart of God where you really, really, really encounter his love.

            Let me tell you a little of my story. I grew up in a Christian family. I grew up singing Jesus loves me this I know, for the Bible tells me so, little ones to him belong, they are weak but he is strong.

“Yes Jesus loves me
Yes Jesus loves me
Yes Jesus loves me
The bible tells me so.”

            Ever since I was really young I heard of the love of God. One of the first verses I memorized was John 3:16 –

16  For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 

            But it is one thing sing about the love of God or to hear about the love of God,  it is another thing to really encounter the love of God. The love of God – to me when I was growing up -  was kind of like seeing the Rocky Mountains on a black and white television. I believed it was true. I knew about it in my head. But until I encountered the love of God in person – I didn’t really get it.

            Maybe you can relate. You know in your head that God loves you – most of the time – on your good days. If you have been to church you have probably sung about the love of God. And if  I were to ask you, you would say, yes God loves me – but you know that sense of his love doesn’t  go very deep.

            I want to read for you one of the great passages from the bible. The apostle Paul inspired by the Holy Spirit wrote

            Romans 8:
31 What, then, shall we say in response to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us? 32 He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things? 33 Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. 34 Who then is the one who condemns? No one. Christ Jesus who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us. 35 Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword?

NO – HE GOES ON TO SAY

37  No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us.
 38  For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers,
 39  neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

            God loves you. Lets listen to . “How deep the fathers Love for us” from the heart of worship CD And then I will come back an unpack this scripture with you.

If God is for us, who can be against us? 32 He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?

            This passage of scripture in Romans 8 is so overwhelmingly positive that it is easy to gloss over the negatives. The passage asks a lot of questions.

Who will be against us.?
            Remember this is the apostle Paul who is writing: The one who was stoned, whipped, arrested, imprisoned, maligned and a hated. And he asks who can be against us.

            What you need to understand is that Paul is not saying that if you are a Christian that you will not experience any opposition. He is saying that when God is on your side, the opposition becomes less significant.

Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen?
            Well the answer is quite clear. Satan is called the “accuser of the brethren” He sees it as his role to accuse you. He will remind you of your past. He will remind you of the most shame filled moments of your life. He will remind you of the moments that you are most prone to beat yourself up about. In fact when you are beating yourself up about those things that you have done in the past, you are singing a duet with the devil.

            But whether it is he or you who are bringing up charges, Paul says that compared to what Jesus did, that he died and he rose again and now says those things are dealt with they are gone.  There is no charges- no condemnation.

Who shall separate us from the love of Christ (hardship persecution famine nakedness danger or sword)
            Paul has experienced all of these and most of us have experienced some of them.

            Now what happens when we go through stuff that is hard, whether it is poverty, or grief, or a difficult job, or a medical illness, we are tempted to say where is God. But even when you feel far from God, God’s love is still clinging to you.

            Paul says  

No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. 38 For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

            You have heard those verses before. I heard those verses before. And I believed them in my head  - but it seems to be a long way between the head and the heart somehow.  Have you ever been there? You know the right answer – and it is easy to believe it for everyone else it is just hard to believe it for you.

            Maybe yourself image is poor. You wonder if you are having trouble with you, how could God not have trouble with you. And while we are on the subject – why did God make me the way that I am – how is that love.

            Maybe you harbor some deep secrets that you don’t want to acknowledge to yourself . You think to yourself – if people knew what I was into, or if people knew what I did last week,  or if they knew my past and what I had done and where I had been – they wouldn’t really want to be around me. And if they wouldn’t how can God love me.

            Maybe life just has beaten up on you. Life just hasn’t gone like you thought it would. Abuse, or divorce, or illness, or trauma, or bad luck, has happened and you feel somehow tainted. Oh you put up a good front most of the time, but in those dark moments you wonder – and you wonder if God really could love you.

            Maybe you are just aware of the fact that you are one of 7 billion people on planet earth. If God’s love is divided 7 billion ways, you figure there is not a whole lot of love for you.

            The problem with all these scenarios is that they under estimate God. They under estimate his size his power and his love. God can hear the prayers of 7 billion people at the same time, and it does not even tax his band with. God can know the lives, and hopes and dreams and heartaches of 7 billion people, he can know how many hairs are on each person’s head – and that is like simple arithmetic to him.

            And so when it comes to God loving  you, he sees you, he knows you better than you do yourself, and even when you can’t see it, he sees what is loveable in you. He sees your value and he sees your worth and he sees you, and he loves you for you.

            In fact he loves you so much that Christ died for you. In fact as we look at our Scripture passage the love of God and the death of Christ are so intimately connected.

34 Who then is the one who condemns? No one. Christ Jesus who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us.

            When Christ died, he died for you. Please understand the bandwith in that statement. God knows you well, he loves you deeply and the full work of Christ is ready to applied to your life individually.

            When I was growing up, I had a poor self image. It actually seemed that other people liked me, more than I liked me. I figure God had to like me. As I said before, I believed in the Love of God – but it was a long way between my head and my heart. It was kind of like viewing the Rocky mountains on a black and white television.

            Through College and seminary I was kind of the middle of the road type of student. Not at the top of the class not at the bottom of the class. My social life seemed to be the same thing, I was neither popular nor unpopular. My spiritual life had that same mediocre quality to it. I knew God, but I got down on my self for blowing it so often. I was very aware of the verse, to whom much had been given much is required. I felt like I had been given much. Yet I wasn’t doing much.

            But there was one day when I was reading 1 John – the passage that we opened the service up today with – it says “God is love” And somehow the immensity of the Love of God, the sheer size of God that he  could know everyone else, but he could also know me personally, the death of Christ and the power of Cross, that God could deal with the whole world – but also me personally came into focus and I moved from a black and white tv perspective to a in person up close perspective. It came into focus. And it blew me away.

            Hear me – God loves you deeply, personally – your faults haven’t surprised him. Your sin hasn’t surprised him. But the depth of his love will surprise you.

            This morning I would encourage you pray, God I hear about your love, I want to believe it for me. Jesus come to me and show me how to encounter the love of God the father.

I proclaim that you are loved in Jesus Christ.

Let us pray:

Lord Jesus, I pray that as people come and see who they are, but more, see who YOU are, I ask Lord, that you would show them the immensity of your love; the band-width of your love; the sheer size of your love: so that they could encounter your love afresh and anew; so some people will be encountering it for the first time. May they know how much you really care for them. Amen.

            One of the great pictures in the New Testament of God is found in a story that Jesus told. He had a son, but his son was not interested in staying with the Father any more. In a rather gruff manner, he said give me my inheritance now – I’m out of here. And he left.

            He lived the kind of life that when he got a little older would fill him with shame, any time he thought of it. But the father the father kept on waiting. He had heard rumours of his son.

            Finally the son came to his senses. And thought he had squandered all his  money, and lived in a way that now made him cringe, he thought maybe I will go home – I don’t expect that my Dad will care about me, but maybe I could at least work for him.

            The Father though, was looking down the road. He saw the son a far off. He ran towards him. He hugged him. He forgave him. He embraced him. He loved him. That my friends is a picture of God.

May you know   Jesus Christ personally and profoundly.  May the Holy Spirit reside deep within your heart .  And may the heavenly Father surround you with His constant and abiding and accompanying love

Rev. Brent Russett
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To listen to the above broadcast, click on the following link: