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Talbot Davis

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The Light At The Beginning Of The Tunnel, Week 3 — The “Spotlight” Sermon Rewind
April 18, 2016 at 3:25 am 1
This message could have been called World Light.  Or Strobe Light.  Or Real Light. It also could have been subtitled:  How to ensure you're never elected to public office or denominational hierarchy. To see what I mean, read below.  It's a message in which the WHEN and the WHERE has everything to do with the WHAT. And it's a message with this almost offensive bottom line:   Jesus isn't the brightest light.  He's the ONLY light.   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Well, you know that phrase “not the brightest bulb in the box,” right? (AV of bulb box)  We use it in describing someone who in comparison to others is not all that smart.  Someone who has a knack for coming in second in two man races.  It’s a companion to phrases like “not the sharpest knife in the drawer,” “not the sharpest pencil in the desk,” or my favorite “a few fries short of a Happy Meal.”  So in this one, there’s a box, full of bulbs (either Xmas lights or my favorite, just plain ole light bulbs), possibly of the 30 watt, 60 watt or 100 watt variety (do an ascending light show) and the one under conversation is not the brightest bulb.  Which means, of course, someone else IS.                 And so, well and good, you know this series is all about The Light At The Beginning Of The Tunnel, and if you’re like me and you figure that at some level all the great religious & philosophical figures of world history are in the box – Confucious, Plato, Mohammed, Buddha, Krishna, Kim  Kardashian – then most of you pretty much want Jesus to be the brightest.  The bestest.  And so we look today at a story in John 8, a story that involves light, and it is one of those stories in which WHERE and WHEN Jesus says what he says has EVERYTHING to do with WHAT he says.  The claims he makes here can never, ever be separated, never well understood, apart from the where and when of his making them.                  Here’s the situation.  When know from John 7 that Jesus is in Jerusalem during Festival time.  And we know it's not going well for Jesus there -- the religious elite keeping lining up against him and against his message.  And specifically, what seems to be in the background in John 8 is the Festival of Lights, which meant that the Temple – Jerusalem’s grand religious structure – was adorned with as many as 16 impressive light bowls (AV).  In an era before electricity and night lighting, these were like incredibly ornate and impressive candelabras.  When all of them were lit up, at night, the locals said that all of Jerusalem could be illuminated by them.  This was the Jews’ way of celebrating that God’s first creative words were “Let there be light.” Part of the ceremony with the lights and candelabras was actually dancing before the Lord.  Yes! We think we’re taking a big risk, being super expressive, when we lift a hand . . . and yet our Jewish ancestors felt that if you wanted to celebrate the Lord, you danced in his presence.  Can I hear an Amen that that’s not a 10C?!                 So there is this incredible spectacle of light – you can’t overstate how impressive this was in an era before electricity – and the religious elite of Jerusalem are dancing & celebrating under the candelabras.  And we know from John 7 that this crowd of Jerusalem elites are already lined up against Jesus.  How does Jesus respond?  He walks into this hostile environment, in the midst of his opponents, in the middle of their celebration, and chooses the THERE and the THEN to crash the party.  Look at these words:     When Jesus spoke again to the people, he said, “I am the light of the world.     Oh Lord!  When you know the WHERE and the WHEN, you realize just how aggressive this is!  How brash!  How in your face!                 Jesus is saying, “All this?  These candelabras?  This dancing?  Your boasting that the candles illumine all of Jerusalem?  It’s all just PRETEND.  It’s all just PRELIMINARY.  I am the authentic fulfillment of all of it.  All this stuff you are seeing and doing will really just swept up in me and by me.  This is fake, partial; I am authentic and complete.”  What Jesus does here is sort of like  . . . going to the Dean Dome on the campus of UNC-CH and planting a DUKE NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS banner; it’s like heading down to Tampa Bay and on the 50 yard line putting a sign that says The Panthers Are The Best (Until the Super Bowl); it’s like going to the RNConvention with a big Feel The Bern button; it’s like going to Mecca at the height of the hajj with a shirt that says JESUS IS LORD.  It’s bold, defiant, dangerous, and essential.                Which makes the pushback that much more understandable.  Look at 12:13:    The Pharisees challenged him, “Here you are, appearing as your own witness; your testimony is not valid.”   Essentially, “we hear you, we don’t believe you, and what give you the right?!”  And 8:14 is tremendous, it captures everything about how John pains the picture of Jesus:    Jesus answered, “Even if I testify on my own behalf, my testimony is valid, for I know where I came from and where I am going. But you have no idea where I come from or where I am going.   The whole of John is about knowing where Jesus has come from and where he is headed to.  Jesus knows it.  A few among his followers know it.  The bulk are clueless.  But Jesus is like “I know my origins and I know my destiny – where I’ve come from and where I’m going” because 8:16c:    I stand with the Father, who sent me.   In John 10, it's I and the Father are one.  8:19 removes all doubt about Jesus’ boldness, his brashness, the decisive, dramatic nature of what Jesus is saying:   Then they asked him, “Where is your father?” “You do not know me or my Father,” Jesus replied. “If you knew me, you would know my Father also.”    All before me is preliminary, all around me are pretenders.  This is not your flannel graph meek & mild Jesus!  I guess you could say this is Jesus unfiltered.                Because surrounded by the religious elite, in the middle of a light ceremony that was the talk of the town, Jesus unleashes a shot across the bow, an in your face comment with unmistakable implications.  Here it is:  Jesus is not the brightest light.  He is the only light.  He is not first among equals; he is alone among pretenders.                 Because listen:  when he says “I am the light of the world,” think of what else he means.  He is telling us:  the world has no other light.  If there is light in the world, it is of Jesus.  Because he is THE light and not A light, all other truth claims, all other religious and philosophical wisdom is the definition of darkness.  After all, look how he finished 8:12b&c: READ.  There is no other alternative.  It’s Jesus or darkness.  Jesus or nothing.  Life or death.  Jesus is not the brightest light.  He is the only light.                 See, here’s what most of us Xns living in the US believe or want when it comes to world religious and competing truth claims.  Remember the box?  There’s Confucious and Buddha and Mohammaed and Krishna and your horoscope and Gwyneth Paltrow.  And we subtly think, “well, Islam is maybe 30 watts (do it?).”  “Buddhism?  More peaceful, more serenity, it’s probably 60 watts.”  “The god of your understanding?  Hey – I know a bunch of now sober alcoholics, so that must be 90 watts (do it?).”  “Jesus, well, he’s MY Savior so in my box at least, we’ll let him be the 120 watt bulb (do it).”  And as nice as those thoughts, even if in your mind Jesus is BETTER than others or wins the comparison, that misses the point of John 8 completely.  He’s not in the comparison game because he is beyond compare.  He’s not slightly better than other figures and philosophy because he created them in the first place!  He’s not brighter than they are; he is the only one shining at all.                 Or maybe we think it’s like when you go to the eye doctor?  Remember?  This.  Or this.  1 or 2.  This or this.  Increasing from blurry to clear.  We think ok, maybe that’s a good comparison.  All the religions give a blurry picture of God but you put them all together and you give clarity.”  Or “Jesus is like the 20/20 while the others are 20/30 or 20/40 or 20/100.”  Nope!  Jesus is the light of life and all else is darkness.  Any light that IS in other religions is somehow a gracious reflection of what originates in Jesus.  It’s an act of his grace, not sourced by their wisdom.  Jesus is not first among equals on a team of rivals.  He is alone among pretenders in a world of evil.  Jesus is not the brightest light.  He is the only light.               This is hard stuff, I know.               This is the opposite of politically correct, I know.               This is not what they teach in school or in university, I know.               This would not get you elected president of the US or even bishop in the UMC, I know.               But just because something is shocking and inconvenient doesn’t make it any less true.               Because I love how pastor & author Frederick Buechner put it.  Now Buechner is a mild mannered Presby pastor & graduate of Princeton (!) hardly a hatemonger or a fundamentalist.  Yet listen to what he says:  Lest students of comparative religion be tempted to believe that at their hearts all religions are finally one & that it thus makes little difference which one you choose, you have only to place side by side Christ & Buddha themselves. Buddha sits enthroned beneath the Bo tree in the lotus position.  His lips are faintly parted in the smile of one who has passed beyond every power of earth or heaven to touch him. “He who loves 50 has 50 woes, he who loves 10 has ten woes, he who loves none has no woes. His eyes are closed. Christ, on the other hand, stands in Gethesemane, angular, beleaguered.  His face is lost in shadow so that you can’t even see his lips, and before all the powers in earth or heaven he is powerless.  “This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.” The difference seems to me this.  The suffering that Buddha’s eyes close out is the suffering of the world that Christ’s eyes close in & hallow.  It is an extraordinary difference and even in a bare classroom in Exeter NH I think it was as apparent to everyone as it was to me that before you’re done, you have to make a crucial and extraordinary choice.   Whew!  See, we who are in Christ are not better people; we just have the only Savior.  We’re not specially selected; we’re just his eternal possession.  Jesus is not the brightest light.  He is the only light.                 It’s so important to me that people get this.  I don’t want you to fall into a lazy “oh we’re all just taking different paths to the same destination” kind of thinking.  Nope.  Jesus is the only one who claimed to be God and then proved it by rising from the dead.  The only one who accurately diagnosed our problem – sin – and then graciously provided its remedy – the cross.  THE. ONLY. ONE.  All people are invited to God’s heart through the one way of Jesus.  As the only light that exposes our sin, illumines the fact that we are made in the image of God, Jesus does what no one else did because no one else could.  NO ONE has those origins and that destiny.  You know why it’s pivotal we in the US don’t water that down?  Because my dear friends in India are dying for it.  Yep.  We’re like Oh, all religions are basically the same; don’t cause a ruckus and our Indian pastors – who Western Xns brought Jesus to in the first place! – are before the authorities declaring, No we don’t worship Hindu gods anymore.  Jesus alone.  To say thank you the authorities empty the church, strip the people and make them watch it burn.  Don’t tell me we’re okay minimizing differences in the name of political correctness until you’ve lived through THAT.  Jesus is not the brightest light.  He is the only light.                 The Jesus who says things like I am the Light of the world is anything but meek and mild.  He is bold and persistent and provocative.  And know this . . . every disclosure he provides like in John 8 pushes for a decision.  He discloses, you decide (hey, it works for Fox News).  We can accept the message of Jesus or reject it; that is our option. But we do not have the option of modifying it.  And the one I want you deciding about today – for both your eternal destiny and the path you walk in your remaining time on earth – is the real Jesus, not a make believe one.                 Because know this: everything of value gets counterfeited.  Think about it.  Does anyone counterfeit these?  (AV, $1 bill)  Probably not.  These?  (AV, $20)  More likely.  These?  (AV, $100)  Yep!  The greater the value, the stronger the temptation to counterfeit.  And Jesus has been counterfeited time and again!  As flower child Jesus.  As best friend Jesus.  As NRA Jesus.  As Rainbow Jesus.  As Hate Sex Jesus.  As American Flag Jesus.  As Give That Pastor A Jet Jesus.  Nope.                 He’s light of the world Jesus.  Not A light.  The light.  I want you to love the real Jesus so much I don’t ever ever ever want you to fall for a fake.  He’s the only only only only light.  
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#TBT – When We Were Partying Like It Was 1999 . . .
April 14, 2016 at 7:37 am 0
. . .  because it was. This photo was taken for a Good Shepherd Church Pictorial Directory shortly after we moved to Charlotte and I started at Good Shepherd in the summer of 1999. Julie and I are now empty nesters. Our daughter Taylor, 26, works in corporate communications and digital marketing for a health care firm in Nashville while our son Riley, 23, is on the staff for Campus Crusade For Christ ("Cru") at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. He is also engaged to be married to Natalie Burke, with the ceremony scheduled for July 30 of this year.   Talbot and family 1999
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Part Of A “Shadow Of A Doubt” Bible Study At Another Church . . .
April 13, 2016 at 6:21 am 1
On Monday night, I headed up to Mooresville, NC (just north of Charlotte) to take part in a LifeGroup meeting connected to West United Methodist Church. Why would I drive an hour to sit in on a bible study associated with another church? Because the group's curriculum was The Shadow Of A Doubt. Shadow So working with the pastoral team at West, we thought it might be both fun and helpful if I could take part in a session in which that book was the subject.  What could be a better learning experience than taking your questions and insights directly to the author? What happened? It turns out that The Shadow Of A Doubt -- which, blessedly, they found to be both logically clear and personally accessible -- was but a launching pad to discuss much of what is at the heart of the Christian faith.  The conversation gave me an opportunity to share some insights that those of us at Good Shepherd have heard so much we take for granted, but that for this particular audience provided new ways of processing an old story. What did we talk about?
  • Christology -- in particular the "Mt. Rushmore" of Scripture passages that speak of a cosmic Christ who is both the agent and sustainer of creation:  Colossians 1:15-20, John 1:1-4, Hebrews 1:1-4, and Philippians 2:5-11.  No "great man Jesus" in that theology.
  • Library -- oh, they loved this.  If you're at Good Shepherd, you've heard it a thousand times: the bible is not a book, it's a library.
  • Hermeneutics (though, of course, we didn't use that word) -- essentially, how do you interpret the bible?  And, because the bible is a library, you don't interpret it literally.  You don't interpret it symbolically.  You interpret it literarily -- meaning, different interpretive methods for the different styles of writing in Scripture.
  • Genesis 1 -- Using the "library, literary" approach,  it becomes clear that Genesis 1 is a hymn with verses and choruses AND that the hymn is designed to show how God is serenely and supremely in control of his creation, in marked contrast to the creation stories of Israel's neighbors.
  • What Matters -- In bible study, what ultimately counts is not "what does it mean to you?' but "what did it mean to them (the first readers and hearers) and how does that connect to life today?
All in all, it was a lively and energizing conversation. And at the conclusion of our time, all the group members picked up copies of both Head Scratchers and The Storm Before The Calm for further study.          
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Bible Study, Life Group Bible Studies, Uncategorized
Top Five Tuesday — Top Five Bible Studies For Small Groups
April 12, 2016 at 3:24 am 0
I have been leading small group bible studies for years now. And I've done it in enough places & with enough people that I know: even the best of groups need good curricula. I currently lead two bible studies -- or, what we call LifeGroups at Good Shepherd. Here are five of the best resources I've found.  Most combine video teaching with daily reading assignments that keep participants involved through the week and then engaged when the group actually meets. 1.  Epic Of Eden, by Sandy Richter.  Richter, professor of Old Testament at Wheaton College, brings Old Testament texts to life with a combination of wit, insight, and application.  Her explanation of "redemption" and its connection to the story of Gomer in the book of Hosea brings me to tears even after repeated viewings. epic of eden   2.  Invitation To The Psalms, by Cokesbury.  The 80s & 90s era Disciple Bible Study shaped a generation of United Methodists.  Yet when the 34-week commitment became too cumbersome for the 21st Century, the publishing house wisely came out with a slew of eight-week classes.  I loved leading these and for sure found Invitation To The Psalms to be the strongest.  To see the entire collection, check here.   Invite To The Psalms       3.  Always True, by James MacDonald.  What?  How is it possible that United Methodist Me comes to like Calvinist James MacDonald so much?  Because he's really good.  His emphasis on God's sovereign love serves as both reminder and balance to my Wesleyan-Arminian thought.   Always True   4.  Breathing Room, by Andy Stanley.  Who needs a book when you've got Andy Stanley on video?  Stanley's sermons, coupled with the discussion questions that accompany them, are one of the best ways to get a new LifeGroup started. Breathing Room   5.  Sacred Marriage, by Gary Thomas.  Marriage isn't there to make you happy.  It is to make you holy.  Chew on that for awhile.  The people of Good Shepherd did in 2010 and both video and text gave us significant food for thought.   Sacred Marriage Gary Thomas   Of course, along these lines, I need to give a reminder for Solve's upcoming release on May 17.  Ideal for fall programming, Solve will take bible study participants deep into the memoir we know as Nehemiah . . . and in doing so demonstrates the surprising ways this old story connects with modern life. All of my books are available through Amazon, Abingdon Press, and here is a link to a full list of my Adult Bible Studies. Solve Book 2
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The “Guiding Light” Sermon Rewind
April 11, 2016 at 3:03 am 0
How to do a sermon encouraging people to "read the bible" without giving a trite message encouraging them "read the bible'? Answer: start with a classic of early contemporary Christian music, throw in some obligatory Led Zeppelin and Lynrd Skynrd, tie it all into regret prevention, and then show them how Scripture is both penetratingly counter-intuitive and brilliantly artistic. And pointed out the irony of a sermon TITLED after a soap opera and a sermon DESIGNED to prevent your life from becoming one. And land it here:  God's direction IS his protection.   -------------------------------------------------- Opened the sermon with singing of 90s tune Thy Word.  I didn't sing it; one of our gifted vocalists did.    Ah, classic, classic, classic. If you spent any time in church at all in the 1990s, you remember that little ditty. If you, like me, did NOT grow up in church (by the 90s, I was in) just so you know: that tune was modern, edgy music back in the day because it wasn’t found in the hymnal. But it was catchy, memorable, and undeniably helpful in memorizing ONE VERSE of Scripture: Psalm 119:105. And it no doubt sounds more regal, more eternal with that ancient THY word is a lamp UNTO my feet & light UNTO my path. We use words like THY and UNTO & you know we’re talking serious bible! Let’s say that verse together: Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and light unto my path.   Now, the sharpest points in this room might be thinking: verse 105?! What in the world? Yes, Psalm 119 is the longest “chapter” in all of Scripture. It’s really not so much a chapter as it is a really, really, really long poem or song. Since the Psalms is the song book, then Psalm 119 is a song & if it’s a song it’s like Kashmir long. It’s like Free Bird Live long. What song is it you wanna hear?  Psalm 119!! It’s like the Grateful Dead or Phish doing a long, live JAM long. Psalm 23 is a pop single; Psalm 119, all 176 verses of it is AOR that you hear on The Ride 95.7. At 3 a.m.   And the subject matter of this epically long song? 119:1 & 9 lay it out:   Blessed are those whose ways are blameless,     who walk according to the law of the Lord.   How can a young person stay on the path of purity?     By living according to your word.     Now: immediately when we hear Law & Word, we think, “Ah! This!” And we hold up our bible, the whole thing in leather. All the pages! And the study notes! The whole kit AND THE kiboodle! Not so fast. Remember: Scripture can mean something to us unless it first meant something to them, the first readers and hearers. And when the ancient Jews heard Psalm 119, they knew it was talking about these (AV Scrolls). The Torah. The Law. The first five books of what we now have as our bible, Genesis through Deuteronomy. You know, the parts of the library you usually avoid, especially Leviticus with its food laws. THAT’S what Psalm 119 is saying is the light and the lamp. Yet I give you that background just for historic context more than anything else; to make sure you don’t jump to conclusions. We at GS come from the perspective that the same HS who inspired the beginning of the library miraculously and mysteriously inspired it all the way to the end.     So with that proper historic context, I think we can see the setting of Ps 119:105 so that it is saying something about the entire library, Genesis to Rev, as it relates to the latboftt. And guess what? To know v. 105 well, it helps so much to see the build up to it! Context! Look at 119:97:   Oh, how I love your law!     I meditate on it all day long.   I love that! LOVE YOUR LAW! Meditate on it! Like this from Leviticus 13:18-20. Great!  Bring your pimples to your priest!    Anyway, back to Ps 119; look at 98-100:   Your commands are always with me     and make me wiser than my enemies. 99 I have more insight than all my teachers,     for I meditate on your statutes. 100 I have more understanding than the elders,     for I obey your precepts.   Now THAT’S something worth pursuing! A promise of a life where you are wiser than your enemies, better insight than your teachers, and deeper understanding than the old sages. I don’t care how old you are or what stage of life you’re in, THAT’S appealing.     And then 119:101:   I have kept my feet from every evil path     so that I might obey your word. READ and circle “from.” Oh gosh. To go TO one thing you gotta AVOID something else. Every bit of direction towards the positive in life involves protection from the negative. And that word FROM there in 101 – protection – changes so much for how we approach THIS WORD & THE LIGHT.   Because is there anyone here who today from the perpective of hindsight in the middle of your tunnel – or even near its end – WOULDN’T have benefitted from protection? That arriving at your destination would have gone so much better with so many fewer regrets if you hadn’t taken those unholy detours? You’ve got a life full of “I wish” & the main person/thing you needed protection from was YOU?! You’re filled w/ regret because you only see your kids on the weekends now and you realize DOH! That’s how I was raised! I wished I’d been protected from foolin’ around that time! Or you wish you’d been protected from getting in so much debt, from losing your temper with the people you love the most. Oh, I wish I’d been protected from starting to drink because once I started I never could stop. Or you know what comes in my office a lot? I wish I’d been protected from those Playboys as a kid because that started a habit I never quite grew out of & it’s ruining my marriage today. Maybe the next most common is those folks who say I wish I hadn’t left faith in college because I’ve got a lot of dark memories & broken relationships as a result. You need some guardrails that weren’t there and even today you’re paying the price. You didn’t know what you didn’t know & the lack of clarity then leads to an abundance of pain now.   Which all leads up to 119:105:   Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path. Ah. In an era before electricity, lights and lamps were mobile and indispensable and you know what the author of this LONG poem is saying IN CONTEXT? That here at the beginning there IS a light for my long tunnel, and that light is from BEYOND me, not within me, and that light when I use it directs my steps in such a way I can live a regret-free life. But the direction of the word always combined with protection from the world. Here it is: God’s direction IS his protection.     Yes! His guide is his guard! Every step TO is also a step FROM. God directs you towards himself and a regret free life by protecting you from you and a regret-full life! The direction of the Word always contains protection from the world. Always. God’s direction IS his protection     Now listen listen listen: this is SO IMPORTANT. Because what I’m talking about here is NOT “oh read the bible to get smart.” It IS that realization that the bible is not there to fit in to our lives. It is there to shape them. The bible never asks for your agreement before it expects your allegiance.  It is the radical realization that you, me, and everyone else EVER needs a light from BEYOND to inform your thinking and guide your decisions. Because what’s the alternative? Your conscience? Like Jiminy Cricket? Hah! We’re masters as self-deception and geniuses at self-justification! Conventional wisdom? Please. Conventional wisdom brought us The Bachelor. MSNBC? Fox News? The Deans of Duke & Chapel Hill & Clemson? Dr. Phil? All so limited, so flawed. All the wrong gods.   Here’s one of the most liberating affirmations of my life: I am not smarter than the people who wrote the bible! What a relief? Even if I somehow become THE SMARTEST MAN ALIVE! . . . I still won’t top the smartest men dead. Paul? Smarter. Matthew? Smarter. Luke? Way smarter. What a relief to acknowledge I need a source from beyond written by people under the Spirit’s insp. And I need it not only to me where to go in life but what to avoid. God’s direction IS his protection   Now: this is NOT magic. Like the preacher who was late for an appointment and after searching desperately for a parking place, finally found one. In front of a NO PARKING sign. So he put a note on his biz card & left in window: Late for appointment. Tried ten times. Forgive us our trespasses. He came back out an hour later to find a note attached to his ticket: Been riding this neighborhood for 10 years. Will lose my job if I don’t ticket you. Lead us not into temptation. No! It’s not magic! It will most frequently NOT astonish you with its brilliance. It is instead to amaze with its odd, odd practicality. It’s the kind of library that when it seeps in to shape you (rather than fitting in to comfort you) will give you this uncanny ability to know the truth and have the truth make you weird.     Can I give you an example? Those of us born in the US are pretty quick to assert “my rights.” You can’t get in my stuff, you can’t get in my seat, you can’t sing a song I don’t like, because I have rights. That’s conventional wisdom. Look at Romans 14:14-15, 20-21:   I am convinced, being fully persuaded in the Lord Jesus, that nothing is unclean in itself. But if anyone regards something as unclean, then for that person it is unclean. 15 If your brother or sister is distressed because of what you eat, you are no longer acting in love. Do not by your eating destroy someone for whom Christ died . . . 20 Do not destroy the work of God for the sake of food. All food is clean, but it is wrong for a person to eat anything that causes someone else to stumble. 21 It is better not to eat meat or drink wine or to do anything else that will cause your brother or sister to fall. What? Not a problem for YOU but IS a problem for bro or sis, so you don’t do what you have the right to do? Exactly. In the church, having the right doesn’t give you the right! It’s not intuitive! We’d never figure that out! So God unveiled and exposed it to us! And when you walk by that kind of light, you walk into relational health and away from relational death. My gosh, in Monroe, in that community YOU DID NOT MOW THE LAWN ON SUNDAY. NBD to me, but there, a huge deal. So what did I do those nine years? I had the right to mow the lawn any day I darn well pleased! But nope! Because God had given me Romans 14 wisdom way in advance and I knew: no Sunday mow. Protected from self and for service. But you’ve got to be in the Word to reap those kind of odd benefits from the Word. It saves so much trouble and you’d NEVER think of most of this stuff on your own!  God’s direction IS his protection     You know what else it’s not? An Instruction Manual. That’s maybe the worst analogy ever. It is a wild, epic library in which the stories in it teach you as much as the straight instruction. And through it all it has this odd wisdom – sex for marriage alone?! 10% to God?! no such thing as my rights?! – that lights your way and makes life work the way God designed it to work. And when you love it, it’s always fresh. Can I show you another? I’ve always loved this back & forth with Jesus & JimmyJohn in Mark 10:35-38:   35 Then James and John, the sons of Zebedee, came to him. “Teacher,” they said, “we want you to do for us whatever we ask.” 36 “What do you want me to do for you?” he asked. 37 They replied, “Let one of us sit at your right and the other at your left in your glory.” 38 “You don’t know what you are asking,” Jesus said.   Love the ominous: you don’t know what you’re asking. Because fast forward in Mark to 15:27:   27 They crucified two rebels with him, one on his right and one on his left.   OMG. That’s what they were really asking for, just didn’t know. What incredible artistry; what brilliant narrative skill. But here’s why I show that to you: I only learned that this year! Been reading it forever, been reading it PROFESSIONALLY for 25 year and just this year saw that incredible artistry of Mark. If you’re one of those artistic people who appreciates hidden clues and deft touches, oh Gospels are YOU. REF   Teenagers: dig into it. Read it. Don’t see if it fits into you. You fit into it. I only came to faith my jr year of high school, somehow spent about 15 minutes a night the next two years reading it and guess what? Enough light came in – stuff I’d never figure out on my own! – that my college years were regret free (except for an unfortunate haircut)!     Young people: it’s not too late. You might have trusted what Beyonce said or what your conscience told you, and you’ve got the scars to prove, but you can still change course. You’re still at the beginning of your tunnel and that oddly bright light is there to show you the way to life and keep you from the way leading to death.   Older folks: you never know it all. I think I’ve got a good mind, I know a lot, I love Scripture . . . but I’ve learned more about this wild, epic, strangely life giving library in the last five years than in the previous 30. It has seeped into my subconscious. Let it do the same for you. It’s like the father and son in the days before electricity who were walking through muddy streets of London. And the boy held the lantern, except he held it way too high. As a result, both sank deep in the mud. “Ah,” the father said, “you must hold the lamp lower to see where not go! That shows you where to go.” Indeed it does.  God’s direction IS his protection   And we’ve got an ideal follow up for this . . . Next Step promo & LifeGroups contacts in lobby
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