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Tag: hope (Page 5 of 5)

Under the Dentist’s Light

Dentist Light

I find no pleasure in going to the dentist. I know that probably does not come as much of a surprise to you. In fact, if I said I liked going to the dentist you would probably think there was something terribly wrong with me.

Many of my deep-seated emotional issues with the dentist’s office comes from regular moments of agony I had as a teen and into my college years with one particular dentist’s office. Each time I would go I would be sentenced to do my time under the critical care of the same hygienist and she was, to put it mildly, a nag. As she carved and hacked away she would go on and on belittling me about all of the problems I had with my teeth and telling me everything she thought I needed to be doing. More than once I wanted to scream at her, “Would you just shut up and do your job!” (I know, not the most sanctified response) but I never did. Why? Well, first of all it is really hard to talk when someone has a pitchfork, chisel, fire hose and Shop-Vac stuck in your mouth all at the same time. Additionally, I knew I was in a rather compromised position and I thought it might not be the best time to start an argument.

Fast forward, would you, with me to another time I was in a different dentist’s chair. As they hygienist was completing her work she commented that she noticed I seemed to be having some difficulties with my gums and teeth. I braced myself for the onslaught I was sure was about to start. It never came. Instead, she told me that she struggled with the same problem and it wasn’t until she had found a particular toothbrush was she able to get things under control. Then she stepped out of the room and came back with the regular bag of dental parting gifts, but she also had a coupon she had found for the particular brush and offered that to me as well, if I was interested.

Do you know what I did that day? I immediately left the dentist’s office, drove across the street to Target, and bought the toothbrush that was suggested, even though I already had a nice shiny new one I had just gotten for free from the dentist.

Why did I behave this way? It was the difference between hearing good news and good advice. The first office gave me a lot of good advice. Everything thing that I was told were things that I should have been doing. But I  didn’t really care to hear it.

The second office told me good news. I was told of a past decision made in her life that had resulted in a positive changed future. Good news is something I wanted to hear. Good news was something I wanted to emulate in hopes of having the same experience.

As Christ-followers, one single act may terrify us more than any other. That is the act of sharing our faith with another, or as we call it “personal evangelism.” I believe what makes it difficult is that too often we are tempted to tell people good advice rather than good news. Good advice says to a person, “You should live a different life.” Good news says, let me tell you about something that changed in my past that has brought a new future for me.

Good advice would say to a blind person “See!” Good news says, “I once was blind but then a man named Jesus rubbed mud in my eyes and told me to wash in the pool of Siloam and now I see” (John 9). Good advice says, “Stop cheating your own people out of their money and pay back what you have stolen.” Good news says, “I  once was sitting high in a tree, just because I wanted to see this man Jesus I had heard about. As he came closer he stopped at the base of my sycamore tree and said he wanted to come over to my house. Did you hear that? Me, a tax collector, a traitor to my own people, was going to have Jesus in my home. That day as I shared a meal with Jesus I felt love and acceptance like I have never felt before. I found hope for a new future. I also knew then that I could not continue to live the way I had been living,  so I immediately gave half of my possessions to the poor and to those people I had cheated I paid them back four times. My weren’t they surprised” (Luke 19). No one wants to hear good advice. Good news can change a person’s whole life trajectory.

What about you? Have you been tempted to share good advice rather than good news? There is no greater news in all of the world than the news of what Jesus did and does in human hearts? What’s your story of good news?

Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

Do you feel a little rusty?

rusty truck

I have seen the movie so many times I should be able to quote the entire dialogue. Trevor used to love to haul logs and help thresh the corn. But those days were long passed him. He sat in the yard amongst rusty old cars and machinery waiting to be melted down and reused. That was the reason Edward came to the yard that day. He came to get a load of scrap metal to take to the steel works to be melted down. After meeting Trevor all that Edward could say was “It’s a shame. It’s a shame.” They were going to cut Trevor up and sell him for scrap. You see, Trevor is a traction engine and Edward, well he is a small steam train. Edward saw through the rusty exterior to see the usefulness of the old traction tractor. As the story progresses it is surprisingly the church who comes to Trevor’s rescue. Buying him from certain destruction, giving him what he needed most, some paint, polish, and oil and in no time he was good as new.

Seeing potential in people can sometimes be a bit more challenging and the road of transformation more complicated. But the first step is to see the next is to do something. Compassion that has no action is really no compassion at all.

Most of us have times in our lives when we questioned our general usefulness. It seemed like life was on an express train to the scrap yard. That is until someone saw us. Someone saw potential we struggled to see in ourselves. They came alongside us with compassion and gave us the opportunity to be as good as new again. Are there people in your life that need to hear a message of continued hope? Do you see them?

Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

Knowing the End

Keep Calm and Kingdom On

Dear Friends,
My promised post about the practices I take to restore my soul will come, but I have decided to hijack my own blog and squeeze this one in ahead.

Seven years ago college football history was made in one of the most stunning games every played. The Boise State University Broncos came head-to-head with the University of Oklahoma Sooners in the 2007 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. On paper the games should have ended with a lopsided pounding of the Broncos by the Sooners. What happened was something totally different. To this day, as a Boise State fan, I can watch the game and feel the intensity, the rise of emotions, the sense of victory slipping away and the ecstatic excitement from and unbelievable victory. When I watch the game today I watch it with a different feeling than I did when I saw the plays unfold live. I know how the game is going to end. The seemingly game ending interception in the closing minutes of the game really isn’t the end of the game. I know how it is really going to end. Boise State is going to win and Ian Johnson will propose to his cheerleader girlfriend on national TV.

As Christians, our life in this world can feel like the impossible football game. We may experience victory and defeat, joy and sorrow, good and evil. It can be easy to feel as though evil has driven the final nail into the coffin of the Kingdom of Heaven.
Jesus said, in Matthew 13, “The Kingdom of Heaven is like a mustard seed” and “the Kingdom of Heaven is like yeast.” What power could tiny seeds and microscopic fungus have against all the powers of this world? In them are all the creative and redemptive power found God himself. In them is the power of Satan’s defeat. In them is hope, justice, mercy, joy, and love. In them is the good news of the Gospel.

As Christians we go through life differently than others. We can go through life with an impenetrable optimism, because we know how the game is going to end. Whatever happens, as Christians let us “Keep Calm and Kingdom On” let us never forget we know how this game will end and never lose our eternal optimism for the Kingdom of God until, as the song says, “earth and heaven are one.”

The graphic you see at the top of this post is one that I created to go along with a sermon series I a preaching at my church. This November I will be going with a team from my church on a mission trip to Guatemala. I am selling shirts with the slogan on it to help raise money for my trip. Click the picture below to go to a page to find out more information and to order a shirt.

Keep Calm Shirt

Of course, you don’t have to buy a shirt to help me on my trip. If you want to help, you may send a check to the church (Hope Wesleyan Church, 857 N Farnham St, Galesburg, IL 61401) made out to the church with “Guatemala” in the memo line.

Thank you everyone for your prayers and support and for indulging me on this post.
Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

 

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