Sunday, June 26, 2016

Memory Verse: Urging Believers to Attend Church

Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful. And let us consider one another in order to stir up love and good works, not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together as is the manner of some, but exhorting one another, and so much the more as you see the Day approaching.” -Hebrews 10:23-25.

Maybe you’ve heard someone say, “I was brought up to go to church!” If so, listen to find out why. First, it is an admonition from the Word of God on how we should conduct the Christian life—with love for and faithfulness to the church. Jesus said that “upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it” (Matthew 16:18). Jesus was referring to the confession Peter made when he said, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Matthew 16:16). To assemble ourselves together with other believers helps us affirm jointly that Christ is Lord. The church has no power to save us, but through the church we learn who Jesus is and come to accept Him as Savior and Lord.

In the focal passage from Hebrews we learn that the church has a mission to “stir up love and good works” among fellow believers. There we can help each other to understand the Word and in time together for study, prayer and worship, and then go forth to live out the love of Christ in our own lives, and to do good works. Christians strengthen and encourage each other. We also help as we are taught and then may become teachers ourselves.

I am glad that even as a child I loved to go to the house of the Lord. To be absent from the “assembling of ourselves together” was a felt loss in my week and on Sunday. In retrospect, I can see that this early love for going to Sunday School, worship services and mission meetings at my church was preparing me for future work the Lord had in mind for me to do. I never dreamed as a young child that one day God would want me to be the wife of a minister and assist in the teaching ministries of the churches he served and the mission work to which he was called.

Hebrews advises strongly: “Hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering,” and to “not forsake the assembling of ourselves together as is the manner of some.” This desire to be in the house of the Lord worshiping and studying should be a hunger of the soul. If that love for the church is no longer in your heart and practice, unless it is because of ill health or other necessary cause, I would say “beware!” A wise Christian leader taught me: “God does not move away from the believer unless first the believer strays from God.” There should be a strong desire to go into the house of the Lord. As we read in Psalm 122:1: “I was glad when they said unto me, ‘Let us go into the house of the Lord.’ “ If that joy is not with you, ask yourself “Why?” Seek God’s forgiveness and find a congregation of believers where you can experience the worship and fellowship the verses from Hebrews 10:23-25 teach, and the exuberance and praise that Psalm 122:1 radiates.

Dr. Vance Havner, a great minister of the gospel, wrote: “There is something wrong with our Christianity when we have to beg most of our crowd to come to church to hear about it.”

I love the words and music to the hymn, “Come All Christians, Be Committed.” Eva B. Lloyd wrote the words and James H. Wood adapted the tune “Beach Spring” from the Sacred Harp to go with her words on the same theme as we read in our focal passage for today.

“Come all Christians, be committed To the service of the Lord.
Make your lives for Him more fitted, Tune your hearts with one accord.
Come into His courts with gladness, Each His sacred vows renew,
Turn away from sin and sadness, Be transformed with life anew.” Amen!
-Ethelene Dyer Jones 06.26.2016

Sunday, June 19, 2016

Memory Verse: Study

Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.” -2 Timothy 2:15 (KJV).

Today is Father’s Day, a day when we honor fathers. My father encouraged me to study and do well. I remember his encouragement and admonitions with gratitude.

In the “memory verse” emphasis I am now writing about in these devotionals, I am selecting one by one (and day by day) those that I have memorized over the years. I am also using suggestions from the book by Robert J. Morgan entitled 100 Bible Verses Everyone Should Know by Heart (Nashville: B&H Publishers, 2010). Today’s selected verse, 2 Timothy 2:15, is not one in Dr. Morgan’s list of 100. I was encouraged early in my life, when I was in first grade at Choestoe School, to memorize this verse. It was not “against the law” then for school children to memorize Bible verses, or for the class to have the Pledge of Allegiance, a Bible reading and the Lord’s Prayer to begin public school in those days. My first grade teacher was Mrs. Mert Shuler Collins. She was also my teacher at Sunday School. She encouraged us at both places—school and Sunday School—to memorize Bible verses. As incentive, she had a chart with her pupils’ names at both locations, and would place a shining star by each child’s name who could repeat the memorized verse to her correctly. Her method may not be recommended by modern-day educators for the feelings of lack of accomplishment it might engender in those who do not earn the stars. But for me, both what this verse from 2 Timothy 2:15 teaches, and the very fact that it was safely lodged in my memory to give me more incentive to study set me on a course to work hard in all my lessons and be on that special road we called “Achievement in Studies.” And my father and mother at home encouraged and helped me to do likewise.

Paul, Timothy’s teacher, and the one who called Timothy his “son in the gospel,” knew that Timothy needed to study well the law and the prophets, but also Paul’s own letters that gave much of the new Way of Jesus as Lord that Paul preached and that he commissioned Timothy to teach and to preach to the churches he sent the younger Timothy to encourage. This verse, although meant to encourage study of the scriptures, can also apply to whatever challenges we have to study that which is good and beneficial. We study in school at first to grow proficient in reading, writing and arithmetic. Then we add sciences and the social studies, more erudite studies in specific fields we want to pursue which will help us in our careers. But the same principle Paul gave to Timothy still prevails, regardless of what pursuit of knowledge we follow, so long as the study is honorable and beneficial. The Amplified Bible gives additional insight into 2 Timothy 2:15: “Study and be eager and do your utmost to present yourself to God approved (tested by trial), a workman who has no cause to be ashamed, correctly analyzing and accurately dividing—rightly handling and skillfully teaching—the Word of Truth.” I take the advice in this verse very literally when I teach a Sunday School class or lead a group in Bible Study. Being a teacher by profession, I sought to apply the principles of this verse in the classroom. The teacher must first study hard and diligently before teaching. A teacher should not be afraid to say: “I don’t know the answer to your question. But keep it in mind. Together we will seek to find the answer.” Eugene Peterson in his modern-language The Message Bible renders 2 Timothy 2:15 this way: “Concentrate on doing your best for God, work you won’t be ashamed of, laying out the truth plain and simple.”’ His translation further admonishes: “Words are not mere words, you know. If they’re not backed by a godly life, they accumulate as poison in the soul” (v. 16). -Ethelene Dyer Jones 06.19.2016

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Messages from the Apostle Paul: Stand Firm in the Faith

Now may our Lord Jesus Christ himself, and God our Father, who loved us and gave us eternal comfort and good hope through grace, comfort your hearts and establish them in every good work and word.” 2 Thessalonians 2:16-17 (ESV) [Read 2 Thessalonians 2:1-17]

In verses 1-12 of 2 Thessalonians 2, Paul instructs the church at Thessalonica more fully about the “day of the Lord” or the Second Coming of the Lord Jesus Christ. Paul refutes the false claim that was circulating concerning the day of the Lord. Some believed it had already come and they were living in the post-second coming days. Did they not wonder why they were still on earth? Would that not have been a sign to them that ‘the day of the Lord’ had not come? He told them not to be ‘shaken in mind’ (v. 2) or to pay any attention to a letter that had been circulated among them and purported to be from Paul and his helpers. Then he proceeds to give some pointers about what will happen before the second coming of Christ.

A great “falling away” will occur. The “lawless one” or “man of sin” will lead a great rebellion against all that has been taught by Jesus Christ and about Him. This leader is called in Daniel 9:26, “the prince who is to come.” John in writing the Revelation calls him “the beast” (Revelation 3:2-10. 18). Called also “the son of perdition,” He will lead a great falling away from biblical doctrines and truth. Many scholars in identifying this person call him the “anti-Christ.” He will draw a great following to himself, and will even move into the Temple in Jerusalem and claim to be God. The lawless one comes under the auspices of Satan, and those who have pleasure in unrighteousness will be deceived by him and follow him.

Paul gives commendation in verses 13-17, and encourages the believers at Thessalonica to stand firm and not be taken in by the deceptions of the lawless one. He prays in verses 16-17 that they will be established in every good work, thus armed against the coming of the one who will deceive and seek to pull them away from the Lord Christ.

When we look at our current age and see so many “falling away,” and seemingly unconcerned about faithfulness to the precepts of the faith and to walking in a manner characteristic of the Christian life, we wonder if we are currently in the age of the “lawless” one. Yet we have not yet seen the world-wide “lawless one” take his reign and have a world-wide following who cater to his demands and manner of life.

With so many casual about their relationship with God, and in particular the current avoidance of mention of God in the public arena, we think that indeed we may be in “the last days” prior to “the day of the Lord.” Dr. John Macarthur, one of our present-day noted teachers, writes: “In place of agitation should come strength and a firm stand. In place of false teaching should come faithful adherence to the truth.” (The Macarthur Bible Commentary. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2005, p. 1769). Paul hoped to clear up confusion about “the day of the Lord” with his 1 and 2 letters to the Thessalonian Christians. From his writings we can more adequately examine our own beliefs and agree with his admonition. Indeed, we need to be faithful, weigh teachings, do good works, and stand firm in the faith. -Ethelene Dyer Jones 06.12.2016.

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Messages from the Apostle Paul: Live a Life Pleasing to God

Now concerning brotherly love, you have no need for anyone to write to you, for you yourselves have been taught by God to love one another, for that indeed is what you are doing to all the brothers throughout Macedonia. But we urge you, brothers, to do this more and more, and to aspire to live quietly, and to mind your own affairs, and to work with your hands, as we instructed you, so that you may walk properly before outsiders and be dependent on no one.” -1 Thessalonians 4:9-12 (ESV) [Read 1 Thessalonians 4:1-12]

Paul’s first letter to the Christians at the church he helped to found at Thessalonica in the Province of Macedonia was written, scholars believe, about 49-51 A. D. while Paul was on his second missionary journey and staying at Corinth (in southern Greece, also called the Province of Achaia). Paul and Silas had also established the church at Thessalonica on Paul’s second missionary journey. It was a new church when Paul was writing this letter, but it had been active in spreading the good news of salvation to others throughout Macedonia. Paul, not being able to go back to visit the new church himself, had sent Timothy to fellowship with them and teach them. Timothy returned to Paul with good news of the faithfulness of the Thessalonian church. When Paul then wrote this letter to them, he wrote it as a pastor to his congregation, making suggestions for a godly manner of life. Another prominent theme in 1 Thessalonians is the second coming of Jesus Christ. To anticipate His return to earth and setting up His kingdom encouraged the people to live holy lives worthy of the gospel.

In this section of 1 Thessalonians, Paul is instructing them in a life pleasing to God. They are to be separate and different from those who have not experienced saving grace through faith. I think my father, J. Marion Dyer, must have been very familiar with Paul’s instructions to the church in Thessalonica as to how to live a godly life. My mother passed away when I was fourteen years old, and Daddy then had the responsibility of parenting to himself. Knowing now from personal experience, having reared two children myself, I can see how burdensome it must have been for him to kindly but strictly instruct my younger brother and me without the help of our mother. (My older sister and brother were already ‘on their own’ and away from home when our mother died).

A list from Paul’s Thessalonian instructions might look something like this (and it is very much like how my dear father trained me): 1. Abstain from sexual immorality. 2. Control your own body in holiness and honor (and this includes the kind of clothes you wear!). 3. God knows what you do, even if an earthly parent does not. 4. God calls you to pure and holy living, and the Holy Spirit is your prod and guide. 5. Love one another, for love is of God. 6. Live quietly and mind your own business. 7. Work is honorable. Work willingly and well with your own hands; whatsoever your hands find to do, do it as unto the Lord. 8. Walk uprightly, and depend upon your own self, not on others for what you need.

To summarize these eight principles of Christian living, we might say: Please God; live in holiness; love one another. We might also train our minds and order our lifestyle by asking, “Would God be pleased with me if I follow this action or do this particular thing?” If there is even a slight negative thought about it, it is better to abstain than to be sorry for poor choices and wrong actions. This is not to stymy work or creativity, but to seek to follow God’s will in what we say and do. -Ethelene Dyer Jones 06.05.2016