The Gospel is at Stake Part 1:: Set Up


We started our series on the book of Galatians this past Sunday called "The Gospel is at Stake." We will use this blog to look back at what we talked about in the message and also to look forward to what is coming. Today we will look back at the set up message from October 24.

Galatians was written to the people in the churches in the region of Galatia that Paul established during his first missionary journey. That journey led Paul to preach in several cities across the region of Galatia and then later come back to those cities and establish churches and appoint elders for those churches. You can see those cities (Salamis, Paphos, Perga, Pisidian Antioch, Iconium, Lystra and Derbe) on the map. (courtesy to ESV Study Bible for use of the map.)

As he preached he would also receive persecution from religious leaders in the cities who threaten to stone him and on one occasion did stone him and nearly killed him. Paul preached a message of justification by faith alone. The religious leaders contended with Paul saying that converts needed to fully obey the law of Moses, which goes against the core of the gospel.

The ESV Study Bible provides this commentary on the Galatians, "In one way or another, everything in the epistle is related to Paul's defense of justification by faith alone. The letter is also unified by the apostle's intensity of tone, which comes through as strongly here as it does in any of his writings—especially in his intolerance of false doctrine and his indignation with people who promote it."

Thanks for reading, be sure to check back to the blog consistently for more commentary and direction as we go through this series and we hope to see you Sunday.

Marriage Conference

Strong marriages are a backbone of any good church. At North Church we are consumed with investing in marriages. The best sermon that a man will ever preach is the way he treats his wife. Much of what we do is centered around these ideas.

Along that line, we want to make you all aware of an event that is coming to St. Louis October 1-2 that will be hosted by Central Presbyterian Church and featuring Paul Tripp. Paul Tripp is a well known author and speaker you can visit his website about the conference here. You can get information on the conference here.

Check these sites out and make plans to go today. You can register on your own through the website.

When Obedience is Hard::David

This week our in series called "When Obedience is Hard" we will look at David. There are so many things that we could talk about in the life of David in regard to obedience.

The message on Sunday will focus on David's encounter with Bathsheeba, Uriah and Nathan. We will look into how and why it is so much harder to walk in obedience after a season or instance of disobedience.

David was a man after God's own heart, but he was also a man who fell into several spirals of bad decisions that were compounded by more bad decisions and ultimately left him as murder and adulterer with a dead infant son.

The story is in 2 Samuel 11:1-27 and 2 Samuel 12:1-24. Try to make time to read through the story and join us Sunday morning at 10:00 at 660 Charbonier in Florissant.

God is faithful

The Lord has been taking me on a journey to better live out the gospel but more importantly, to speak the gospel to the lost. For the past several months everywhere I go and everything I do has been done with the thought of, how can I communicate the gospel today. This is not a sign of my spirituality as much as it is the Lord's faithfulness to teaching me urgency in my obedience in this matter.

We, in the past couple weeks, I have had the opportunity to speak the message of Christ's death, burial, and resurrection for the forgiveness of sin, to 3 different individuals specifically. Each of these opportunities has stemmed from the Lord simply saying to me, "If you are willing and surrendered, I will use you." And so that has been my approach each day, and it's been amazing to see the Lord's faithfulness, even in my unbelief and timidity in those moments. Ask me the stories, they are really cool!

Will we remember that God's faithfulness is the means to our obedience? I challenge you to simply say each morning, "Lord I want to be minister of reconciliation today. Make me aware of opportunities to speak your name today and give me your grace to walk in obedience. I surrender."

Gen 18:14 - "Is anything too hard for the Lord."

Journeying to better obedience with you,
Dave

When Obedience is Hard

On Thursday last week, my brother-in-law bought our kids a trampoline. It was a surprise to them, they had no idea it was coming. They went off to school that morning with only a swing set in the back yard and they came home to it all set up and ready to go.

The ritual for my kids driving home from school is to snack on what they did not eat for lunch. It is Pavlovian. We pack Cooper and Mia a little extra in their lunch boxes so they can have a snack on the way home. On the way from the door to the car on this day, I asked them if they had homework. Cooper did but Mia did not. I told Cooper to work on his homework instead of eating his leftovers from lunch. This did not sit well with him. "But dad I am hungry...I am starving", Coop whined from the back seat. I told him to trust me, that when we got home he would be glad that his homework was finished. But he was focused on those left over Doritos.

After a couple of minutes of convincing Cooper to trust me, he finally relented and worked on his homework in the car. About a block from home he got it finished. Because his work was done he got to enjoy the new tramp immediately instead of sitting at the kitchen table while his sisters jumped.

As Dave preached yesterday, I thought of this story in relation to our obedience. He talked about Abraham and how hard obedience was for him. Romans 4:20-21 is talking about Abraham. The words "fully convinced that God was able to do what he had promised" are beautiful.

The point is that when God calls us to some sort of obedience, He is not trying to rob from us; He is trying to give to us. In the car ride home from school, I was not trying to deprive Cooper of his snack, I was trying to allow him to jump on his trampoline as soon as he got home. I was trying to make him happy.

So many times we end up there. We are distrusting of God. We distrust His motives, we think we are better and getting joy for ourselves than God is. We focus on the thing He is calling us away from (Cooper and his snack) rather than the thing that he is calling us to(the trampoline, which is always better.

Failure to obey almost always is a failure to believe God.

Thanks for reading and have a great day!

God's Noahic covenant of grace depicted through the rainbow

New series starting tomorrow














There is an element to our pursuit of the Lord and call to obedience that is always difficult and even, at times, seems impossible. But that perceived impossibility is never to negate our response. So how do we, as believers, actually walk out the things Christ calls us to? I think that more often than not our perception of the Lord up in Heaven looks something like this:

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THE LORD: "Hey Joe, I want you to go over and share the gospel with Melissa." (laughing under his breath)

JOE: "But Lord, isn't she an atheist?"

THE LORD: "Yeah she is, but that's ok." (under his breath: "good luck with that one - haha")

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While we wouldn't actually say it like that, I think that's how we really see it. As if the Lord enjoys burdening us with impossible tasks and watching, from a distance, as we suffer.

This series will begin to show us how active and present the Lord is in engaging us in our call to obedience -- that he isn't distant in the things he calls us to, but rather is actually the very one that enables us to live for him.

Over the next 6 weeks, We will look at the stories of Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, Gideon and Hosea. We will see the gospel portrayed through the Lord's covenant relationship with each of these Old Testament characters.

I want to challenge us to begin preparing our hearts and giving permission to Christ to address our obedience to him, or lack there of. Will you join me in praying Psalm 139:23–24?

"Search me, O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts! And see if there be any grievous way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting!"

Journeying to better obedience with you,
Dave