Two Points::Monday May 17


Today's two points come from the sermon from yesterday. You can listen to it here. We began a new series yesterday called "Questioning the Church" and this is a vital study for us and for Christians in general. We need to learn what scripture says about the church and what God intended the church to be and what God intended the church to do. So we will use this blog to go into detail with some topics that are touched on in the messages. Be sure to check the blog frequently and know that you are encouraged to interact here and connect with a Community Group for face to face interaction.

Point 1- Deuteronomy 4:10 (ESV)
10 how on the day that you stood before the LORD your God at Horeb, the LORD said to me, ‘Gather the people to me, that I may let them hear my words, so that they may learn to fear me all the days that they live on the earth, and that they may teach their children so.’

The word that is translated here as gather is translated elsewhere as assemble and it is the Hebrew word for church. The Hebrew church is a gathering or assembling of God' people. But the real information that is here is what follows because it lays out the purpose of the gathering or assembly or church. The author lays out three things as purposes for the church.

1. To teach the word- We gather together as the church for the purpose of being taught the word of God. The Bible is the word of God so the church exists to teach the Bible.
2. To learn to revere God and place Him in proper perspective- Deut 4:10 uses the language "Learn to fear". The is a commonly used phrase in Old Testament and it can be summarized as having a proper view of God and his power, glory, love and other attributes. It means to respect, revere, worship, see properly. The church exists to lead people to a proper view of God.
3. To disciple others- We have the word taught to us and we receive this proper view of God and then we teach it to our children or those who come after us. The church exists to create disciples.

There are so many places in scripture where the purposes of the church are spelled out, none of them are exhaustive. This one is no exception. These are not the only things that a church does, but they are what a church does. Every church should be doing these things, if it does not it is either not a good church or it is simply not a church.

Point 2 The church is more than just doing something spiritual. This is a point that Dave made in the message last night and it is spot on, especially for this current generation.

We live in a culture that rebels against organized religion. Many of the critiques on organized religion are valid and need to be challenged. But the pendulum has swung too far. Instead of reform to the church we have fake replicas of the church. We have three guys meeting at Starbucks and talking about spiritual things replacing the gathering. We have Christians living outside the gathering who have no one who has authority or discipline in their lives. This is not a church and this is not what Go has called His people to.

We have to KNOW that God has brought about this redemptive plan of Jesus and has impacted the world through this plan to reconcile man to Himself and He has created the church to accomplish this task. Living outside of a gathered expression of God's called people (another way to church) is living outside of the plan of God. This is important and heavy stuff that must be said to this generation of people who have been hurt or turned off by particular churches.

Mark Driscoll says this about this idea, "The postmodern world would have an entirely new definition of church, one in which church is understood as a community of Christians and non-Christians who love together without distinction, without leadership, or discipline or doctrine, trying to emulate the character of Jesus without stressing the gospel requirements of repentance of sin and faith in Jesus that enable the life of Jesus to be lived by the power of the Holy Spirit.”

Get into and connect honestly with a church THIS WEEK!

Men's Retreat


One of the reasons that North Church began was to attempt to lead men to be men. We believe that many of the problems in the culture in 2010 are present because men are silent, lazy or absent. There is a great task that God has given to men.

God has placed in men an innate drive to explore and create and conquer. Men are drawn to adventure. Men like movies about war. Men like red meat. Men are also arrogant and dumb and seldom ask for help. Men are called to serve their families and their communities and each other.

The men's ministry at North Church is called Band of Brothers (patterned after the HBO mini series). All that Band of Brothers is about is helping men realize their God given task and to war along side each other.

Our Men's Retreat is the big event for the year. We will tent camp at Timbercreek in DeSoto Missouri. It is only an hour from North County so that people can come and go if schedules dictate that.

We will cook over an open flame, use the many free facilities at the resort (check out the website linked above), hang around the fire under the stars late nights and watch some of the new HBO series The Pacific.

Details:
Cost-Free
Food and drink-Bring your own
Sleeping-Bring a tent and sleeping bag/air mattress or share tent space.
Dates-Arrive anytime after 4 on Friday May 21 we will leave the morning of the 23rd.

Email me with any questions rik@northchurchstl.com

Overwhelmed with Sorrow

Recently my mind has been consumed with the deep pain and suffering many dear friends have been experience in these days. As I grieve with them, everything in me want to just fix the situations. As much as I want to have the "right things to say," my greatest desire would be to just make it go away completely. I'm sure they wouldn't complain :).

In all of my love and encouragement to the brokenhearted, my desire it to point them to Jesus. Why? Is that just the good Christian thing to do? How in the world does saying "trust Jesus" offer any hope when the bottom has fallen out of life?

One of the most comforting things to know is that Jesus is intimately acquainted with our pain. Not simply because he is God, but because he has been there. The night before he was going to be crucified he prayed to the Father, "My soul is very sorrowful, even to death" (Matt 26:38). Maybe in your pain you have thought this...I just want to die so this will all be over. Jesus was so overwhelmed with sorrow (Isaiah 53:3) that he began to sweat blood. One of our tendencies is to dumb down the agony of the cross and simply say, "He's Jesus, it wasn't that bad for him." This passage clearly tells us that the last thing Jesus wanted to do was die. He didn't want to suffer the agony of the cross. He didn't want to suffer the agony of His Father's wrath poured out for sin. He was "OVERWHELMED WITH SORROW." This moment of his life was the deepest darkest pit he had ever experienced and he wanted to do whatever it took to get out, at least in that moment. He said, "My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me" (Matt 26:39).

But his conclusion is one that offers us so much hope and purpose in our suffering. "
nevertheless, not as I will, but as you will" (v.39). In the deepest, darkest pit of his life, Jesus, the Son of God, turned to the greatest and most sure hope he had...the same hope that we have today. That hope was the loving, sovereign will of His Father. He didn't understand it in that moment. He even wanted to run from it, but he found more joy in walking in the will God had for him than he would have ever found if he could have removed his pain.

We never will that pain would happen in our lives. In fact, we do everything we can to run from the pain. But we learn from Jesus that it's in the deepest pit of the pain where we find a Father whose will is certain and his plan is perfect. Imagine if Jesus would have escaped the pain and ran from the cross...but he didn't. He ran to it.

My prayer is that you would run to your pain. Don't suppress it! Don't hid from it. Run to it! For it is in the deep pits of your life that you find a loving Father who want to bring miraculous salvation to your soul. Don't waist your suffering! Allow it to be the tool God has designed it for...to get you to Him. For it is there you will find rest and hope and yes even JOY that you would have never experienced otherwise. (Ps. 16:8-11)

Ps. 119:50
This is my comfort in my affliction, that your promise gives me life.

Lord help my friends find abundant life (John 10:10) in you knowing and believing the truth of Isaiah 26:3-4

3 You keep him in perfect peace

whose mind is stayed on you,
because he trusts in you.
4 Trust in the Lord forever,
for the Lord God is an everlasting rock.




Purpose

Let's say a friend of yours, no a hero of yours was leaving town. That hero was a great influence and mentor to your life. He calls you and few of his closest friends and asks you to come over for a bit the day that he is leaving. He says that he has something important to share with you before he leaves.

At the risk of being cheesy, this is what happened with Jesus. The gospels and the book of Acts record this conversation. The circumstances are as follows: Jesus has resurrected and shown himself to his followers and taught them. Then he gathered them to give them some last minute instructions.

He told them that they were his agents of the Kingdom. We can take that directive from Jesus as well. If you are a follower of Jesus, you are his agent of the Kingdom.

Let me explain what it means to be an agent of the Kingdom. When sin entered the world, all types of strife came with it. Pain, sickness, death, famine, disease, broken relationships, hate, natural disasters and all that brings pain to you and I in this world. Jesus did not come only to save us from our sins, but begin the process of reestablishing his Kingdom. All that strife will be gone one day. We are to be his agents of that Kingdom on this earth now.

The words of Jesus before he left at translated as, "go proclaim the gospel to the whole world." The word that is translated as proclaim is to make known with gravity and authority. The word that is translated as the gospel is the good news of what Jesus did for you. Included in that good news is this sense that he was here to bring the Kingdom.

I am not much on alliteration for the sake of alliteration, but on earth Jesus was about restoration, redemption and reconciliation. That is what he was talking about when he talked about establishing his kingdom.

Here is the kicker to it. Jesus came to do all of this, it was God's plan from the beginning to have Jesus come to this earth and live a perfect life to restore brokenness of this world, brokenness of relationship between man and man and the brokenness of the relationship between God and man. But that is not the end of the plan. Part of that plan is for you and I and other followers of Jesus to be agents of the Kingdom. To act on its behalf.

We all want to be a part of something that is bigger than ourselves. This is it! You are an agent of the Kingdom, that is way bigger than you and it is an adventure that you are called to.

Experience Easter:: Saturday

I am in the library and I am here to prepare for the sermon tomorrow. I cannot concentrate on the sermon. My mind is taken to the darkness that I had to be in the minds and spirits of those who followed Jesus the day after he died.

Many of you who might read this know about Megan Moss. She has a sick heart and she needs a transplant. Last night was a very difficult night for her and she had an emergency procedure to help her heart do it's job. The procedure went well.

There were many praying last night. Many different circles of people who do not know Megan or anyone in her family. I am not sure why the procedure succeeded, if the prayers that were lifted up changed anything or not.

But I do know this. Whatever happened last night and whatever happens today or in the coming days. If Megan gets a new heart and lives to be 100 years old with lots of kids and grand kids or if none of that happens, tragedy does not stay tragic. It turns to hope because of what we will celebrate tomorrow.

There is a song I know, its first lines are these...
All you ever do is change the old for new.
God is bigger than the air breathe, the world we'll leave.
And God will save the day, and I will say my Glorious.


The point that I am trying to make is that we know the end of the story. You may be in darkness, dealing with difficulty or tragedy. You may have hurt or pain. It might not all make sense. But let me say one word about this darkness. Before I do, stop and think about darkness that is or has been in your life. Maybe even write it down on a piece of paper or in your minds eye, write it on a piece of paper. There is one word that is written across that piece of paper. TEMPORARY.

That word is written by Jesus as a result of what we will celebrate tomorrow. Temporary is a beautiful word isn't it? Celebrate temporary today. Weeping may tarry for the the night but joy comes with the morning Psalm 30:5

Experience Easter Part 5

Today is a day of immense sorrow and injustice, as the perfect Son of God is treated unfairly and brutally murdered. While you were sleeping last night, Jesus was betrayed by Judas, arrested and tried against the law.

Today's reading:
  • Christ’s final prediction of His death and resurrection (Matthew 26:31-35)
  • Christ’s great high priestly prayer (John. 17:1-26):
  • En route to Gethsemane (Luke 22:35-38)
  • In Gethsemane (Matthew 26:36-56)
  • Christ’s Unfair Trials
1. The Jewish religious trials
A. Christ stands before Annas (Jn. 18:13-14, 19-23)
B. Christ stands before Caiaphas (Mt. 26:57, 59-68)
C. Christ stands before the entire Sanhedrin (Mt. 27:1)

(two-fold tragedy during those trials)
(1) The denials by Peter (Mt. 26:33-35, 69-73, 75)
(2) The death of Judas (Mt. 27:3-10)

2. The Roman political trials
A. Christ stands before Pilate—for the first time—(Mt. 27:2, 11, 12-14)
B. Christ stands before Herod Antipas (Lk. 23:6-12)
C. Christ stands before Pilate—for the final time—(Mt. 27:15-26)

3. The military mockery trial
A. Christ stands before the soldiers (Mt. 27:27-31)
  • Crucifixion - approx. 9am-3pm (Mt. 27:32-56)
  • Burial - evening (Mt. 27:57-61)
This day in history bears so much weight on historical Christianity and all that was accomplished for us in the crucifixion of the perfect Son of God. In the sorrow of today, we know from Scripture that none of these things matter apart from what we will celebrate on Sunday. Don't lose site of the true meaning of this time of year and pray that the Lord would give you the ability to truly celebrate all that he has done for us. Praying that the Lord would give us opportunity to tell others why we celebrate Easter.

Experience Easter Part 4

Today's reading is about The Passover. For the followers of Jesus, The Passover was a huge deal. It was the day the people celebrated the freedom from the slavery they endured under the Egyptians. It is Christmas and Independence Day today rolled into one. It is a week long celebration of the freedom from oppression. It is significant, because at the time what you read today was written they were being oppressed, this time by the Romans.

The reading is Matthew 26:17-30.

As you go through this day today, understand that this day in the holy week is the last day that is somewhat normal for Jesus. It is the last time that Jesus will spend a full day with his disciples. It is the last time Jesus will lay his head down to sleep. It is the last day of his life, he will be dead tomorrow.