Showing posts with label preaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label preaching. Show all posts

Sunday, February 21, 2021

Following the Right GPS | Pastor Johnnie Simpson Jr




Psalm 25:1-10
1 In you, Lord my God, I put my trust.
2 I trust in you; do not let me be put to shame, nor let my enemies triumph over me.
3 No one who hopes in you will ever be put to shame, but shame will come on those who are treacherous without cause.
4 Show me your ways, Lord, teach me your paths.
5 Guide me in your truth and teach me, for you are God my Savior, and my hope is in you all day long.
6 Remember, Lord, your great mercy and love, for they are from of old.
7 Do not remember the sins of my youth and my rebellious ways; according to your love remember me, for you, Lord, are good.
8 Good and upright is the Lord; therefore he instructs sinners in his ways.
9 He guides the humble in what is right and teaches them his way.
10 All the ways of the Lord are loving and faithful toward those who keep the demands of his covenant.

Many of us have spent time traveling long and short distances, to places we have been to before and places we have never been before. When I go places, I like using GPS, sometimes even when I know where I am going, a GPS will let me know about any road closures, traffic jams, the GPS lets me know exactly how long it is going to take to get me there. Something I have learned using the GPS, speeding doesn't save me as much time as I thought it does. It might if I have to go 40-50 miles, but going on a short trip, not so much. I might get 1-2 minutes back. I still like to go fast, I just know I'm doing it to feel the speed, I am not saving any time...or gas. There are so many options for GPS and I may use a different GPS depending on the situation. There are tons of different GPS apps out there to choose from, each app offers a different look, feel, and different features besides just telling you how to get where you are going. There is one GPS app I don't like because if I am listening to something like music or a podcast while that app is open, it pauses them says the next direction, then restarts the music, over and over again, keep right and take this exit, take this exit, stay on the feeder road, all while my favorite song has stopped 10 times in 5 seconds. One GPS app I like to use won't pause the song but turn it down, and on that one, you can turn the voice completely off and just have the visual directions. 

People have their favorite GPS, they come with so many features now, like the ones that tell them where the police are located, so they know when and where to slow down. There are GPS apps that tell you where the traffic is and when to take a detour, some GPS apps let you know about car accidents. There are even GPS apps that allow you to program the voice giving you directions, one parent I know has her GPS programmed to her child's voice when they were 7...and cute, the GPS serves as a reminder now that the child is much older...their voice is not as cute

People have their own system to get from point a to point b, some use a GPS, some like to write the directions down, some like to just drive around the general area until they find where they need to be. All kinds of ways to get somewhere. Some people seem better at finding their way than others. All of us form “cognitive maps” of locations we travel to frequently. Otherwise, we wouldn’t even be able to find our way around our house. But some people form “cognitive maps” even for places they’ve visited only once. If they ever go back there, they can navigate easily and have an inner sense of where things are in relation to other things. For example, “McDonald’s is here, so the library is to the left, and the street beside that should take me back to the highway.”

Author Erik Jonsson, in his book direction-finding titled Inner Navigation, says “Our natural curiosity, the interest with which we look at new things, especially those that stand out as landmarks, is enough to create the cognitive map without any conscious effort.” Basically how curious we are about our surroundings determines the quality of our cognitive maps. Whether we are writing directions down, using a GPS app, or just exploring until we find a way, there are so many options out there our focus can be shifted to so many things. How do we know if we are on the right path? How do we know that we are not embarrassing ourselves? 

David was dealing with the same question in scripture when he wrote the 25th Psalm.  David wrote Psalm 25, an acrostic poem, or a poem that uses each letter of the Hebrew alphabet in order. Psalm 25 is also a prayer about focusing on God because David was worried about being put to shame. Our focus should be on God. Faith and hope mean being open to God's instructions. Focusing on God brings the spirit into our lives and the power to stay on the right path. David asks God for a few things in his prayer. 
First David says to God, protect me. 

Protect me (25:1-3)
Following the right GPS keeps you protected from dangers. David says he will put his trust in the Lord and his enemies will not triumph over him. When you are on the right path you will not run into enemies you can't beat. The text says trust in the NIV, the NRSV, King James, and New King James says I “lift up my soul.”  David trusts the Lord with his life and because he trusts the Lord with his life he doesn't believe he will ever be put to shame. When David talks about shame in the text this is not an internal feeling, this is public humiliation. We follow God to keep us protected, there are times in my life where I heard a voice tell me to go the other way told me to go home, and I am standing here today because of God’s protection. 

That hope in verse 3 could also be translated into patiently waiting, those who hope in the Lord won't be put to shame. We can wait on a host of things, people, places, politicians, organizations, systems, sometimes they may work out other times they may not, however, waiting on the Lord will always work out. 

I know it is rough right now but when you are hurting and don't know where your help is coming from, God sees your pain. God sees your suffering. Wait on the Lord and his protection as David did, God will protect us like he did David. 

Pilot me (25:4-5, 8-10)
Following the right GPS keeps you in better company, the text says “make me know your ways” David had the presence of mind to ask God to teach him God's ways. I remember seeing bumper stickers and signs that would say "God is my co-pilot" then later on I saw bumper stickers and signs that said, if God is your co-pilot, switch seats." David is saying he doesn't have it all together, that he has not arrived yet. David says he still needs God to guide him, help him, pilot him on this journey called life. When we have the right pilot, we take ourselves and others in the right direction. We have to let God and God's word lead us, not political beliefs, not greed, not the chance to score points on our so-called haters. 

When we have the wrong pilot, poor decisions are made. Here in Texas, we saw firsthand when greed, and a refusal to plan ahead meet a natural disaster. Not the natural disaster itself but how the so-called leaders responded to it. Politicians were told to prep their plants for cold weather 10 years ago but didn't because they thought it cost too much. Politicians blaming wind turbines and the new green deal for the whole state being out of power when the new green deal hasn't even been put in place. Politicians deciding to go to Cancun while their constituents are freezing without heat, power, and water. Politicians saying that Texans would rather put up with days without power than connecting the Texas Electrical grid to the rest of the country...Naw bruh. 

When our pilot is greed, people suffer, when our pilot is political, people suffer, when our pilot is division, the people suffer. The Bible tells us over and over to love God and love our neighbor. David is following the right pilot when he said that God guides the humble in what is right and teaches them his way. We have to follow the right pilot; the right pilot uses the right GPS. 


Pardon me (25:6-7)
David asks God for forgiveness; this forgiveness is based on God's steadfast love (hesed). Hesed means covenant loyalty, kindness, and mercy, as well as steadfast love. It is used as a synonym for the word verse 6 with rahamim (tender mercy/compassion), which is also related to a Hebrew word for womb. What David is saying with all these words related is that God's mercy and steadfast love have been there since the beginning, as a matter of fact, God's love and mercy "are old as time." David fervently yearns for God to forgive him rather than to remember his sins. God is a merciful God; God's love is steadfast. 

When you are struggling and cannot find your way there is a GPS that is better than the rest. Following the right GPS will get you to the right destination. Even the sinners can follow the right GPS. God's love is available for all. Following the right GPS will lead us to God’s pardon. 

Sunday, November 29, 2020

Frustration | Pastor Johnnie Simpson Jr


Frustration
Isaiah 64:1-9 NIV

64 Oh, that you would rend the heavens and come down,
    that the mountains would tremble before you!
2 As when fire sets twigs ablaze
    and causes water to boil,
come down to make your name known to your enemies
    and cause the nations to quake before you!
3 For when you did awesome things that we did not expect,
    you came down, and the mountains trembled before you.
4 Since ancient times no one has heard,
    no ear has perceived,
no eye has seen any God besides you,
    who acts on behalf of those who wait for him.
5 You come to the help of those who gladly do right,
    who remember your ways.
But when we continued to sin against them,
    you were angry.
    How then can we be saved?
6 All of us have become like one who is unclean,
    and all our righteous acts are like filthy rags;
we all shrivel up like a leaf,
    and like the wind our sins sweep us away.
7 No one calls on your name
    or strives to lay hold of you;
for you have hidden your face from us
    and have given us over to our sins.
8 Yet you, Lord, are our Father.
    We are the clay, you are the potter;
    we are all the work of your hand.
9 Do not be angry beyond measure, Lord;
    do not remember our sins forever.
Oh, look on us, we pray,
    for we are all your people.

We all moments when we struggle with frustration sometimes. Frustration happens when things don’t go the way we hope, resolutions don’t come in a quick and efficient way, when our patience gets low and our hopes and wants are left unattended. 
Like this pandemic. Or hurricane Harvey repairs that still need to be done. Or injustice in our government... frustration over not getting well soon enough, frustration over not getting out of debt when you want, frustration can come over the little things or the big things, short term and long term... 
frustration can build up over time, a few minutes, a few hours, days, weeks, months, years...


People felt frustration, and many other emotions in Isaiah's writing. This book was written in what scholars call the Exilic period. Isaiah was written after the land had been conquered by the Babylonians. A people separated from their land, separated from their friends and families, living life on terms they were not used to and did not like. For many years, Isaiah was written in somewhere between 586 BCE and 515 BCE so it was after Babylon conquered Israel and before the Temple was rebuilt. When Babylon conquered Israel, certain cities were destroyed, along with the major temple, and some of the people were removed from their homelands. The people of God were desperate, they had lost the building they worshiped in, and they were separated from loved ones, for years, for decades. 

We may not have been separated for years, but we are going on many months. Months of having to talk to loved ones in nursing homes through windows, 
months of people passing away in hospital rooms by themselves. 
Months of people calling this a hoax, 
months of people losing their jobs, holiday and travel plans altered or cancelled. 
Months of trying to figure out new technologies, 
months of trying to homeschool children or being nervous every time you dropped them off and picked them up. 
Months of churches not having face to face worship and some of those that did, have to keep taking breaks because someone or multiple people in the congregation tested positive for COVID-19. 

The frustration may not be all because of the pandemic, lives have changed, and this pandemic has made things more complicated. Families have changed over these months, homes don't look the same, people who used to be in the home are not anymore. Or you may have started off in March with one living arrangement now you have more people in your house than you signed up for. Jobs have changed, for those who still have them, schools have changed, little Billy catches a cold, don't you bring little Billy back in this school without a note from the Doctor saying he doesn't have COVID. Elective surgeries have changed, just ordering food has changed. 

Some people feel frustration because they can look at a situation, they can look at the condition of world around us and wonder, where is God? Maybe they wonder Has God decided to take a break while we suffer? I don't see him around; does he not see us out here repeatedly suffering? 

The prophet Isaiah felt like God was absent, not only absent but intentionally hiding from him and the people while they are suffering. The text says also that the people have sinned, missed the mark, fallen short of what God wanted them, what God has called them to be. It has gotten to the point that even the good things the people do are considered bad. Isaiah has asked for God repeatedly and to this point as far as he can tell God has not shown up. God isn't doing what the people want him to do in these times and the people are hurting, they are frustrated, angry even. They are caught in the middle of some bad conditions, some external factors outside of their control.... the pain and the pressure are mounting up. The people of God have an entire nation against them, they don't see God, and they don't know what to do. They are caught in the middle of some trouble and now they cannot even tell who is hurting them. They don't know if they want freedom from their pain or just vindication against those that hurt them. 

Their rebellion has brought the realization that the Israelites need God. 

Verses 1-3 Direct appeal 
Cry out to God, come through the heavens and tear them open. This is a direct appeal to God. Not only a direct appeal but also to remember what God has done. It may feel like God is absent, but we have seen what he has done before, we can pray that he does it again. Hold on to the other times he made a way out of no way, hold on to the other times he delivered you from the hands of the enemy. 

God's presence is awesome and amazing and when you have experienced it you want to have it again and again. You may feel frustrated when you don’t feel the presence of God - When you are missing it in times of trouble you want to call out to experience it again. I remember the song by James Cleveland and even though it's rough right I don't feel no ways tired. I've come too far from where I started from, nobody told me the road would be easy, but I don't believe he brought me this far to leave me. Isaiah is calling on the Lord, I need you, I have to have you, I can't live without you. 

Verses 4-5 Profession of Faith
The text says from ages past no one has heard, in times of trouble we have to work our faith. That is hard to do sometimes, but when we think about it, we use faith all the time. We eat food we didn't grow or process that we bought from a building we didn't build, drive a car on the road with other drivers we didn't train, go to a doctor and take medicine we didn't make. We exercise faith all the time. The text says you meet those who gladly do right. They want the Lord, say so, act like it. Just because there are no seas splitting right now doesn't mean that God abandoned us. 

Verses 5-7 Confession of Sin/Acknowledge God's anger
Isaiah is acknowledging that some of this mess they are in, and there is a confession of sin.  I find it interesting that the prophet says the people sinned because God "hid himself." When I read my Bible, I see that the people of God sinned whether they thought God was around or not. God was right in their face and they sinned. Nobody is perfect but time after time they missed the mark and they overlook their individual responsibilities. It’s seems that they are blaming God for their sins as he talks about God not being there. 

Like Isaiah, sometimes we get frustrated with our situations, but We have to acknowledge that we have contributed to some of our problems... some are our own fault, or maybe we did things to make matters worse.  As believers, we have to take responsibility for our own actions. If we acknowledge our own actions, we can start to take steps to change our situation while we wait on God.

Act like you can change a situation until God comes and changes it
So pray as if it depends on God, work as if it depends on you. We have to be willing to be active participants in our deliverance and that starts with acknowledging that we messed up. 

Theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer said that "God would have us know that we must live as men who manage our lives without him." 

Verse 8 Let God mold you
When we acknowledge that we have some work to do and then start to do that work, it is that much better for God to do a work in us. God is the potter, and we are the clay, let those hands shape us, let the fire burn, let us come out of the furnace better than we went in. 

This time of trouble and frustration, this too shall pass, and we will be able to look back on it with a smile and say 'I remember that... that was a wild situation but if it had not been for the Lord on my side where would I be?" 

These down times are not the end times, they are half-time are you ready to play the rest of the game?

Verse 9 Urgent Petition - I just have to say it one more time, God I need you. I need you to breathe, I need you to come down here and see me. I am nothing without you God, I am lost like a ship without a sail. You are our father, and we are your children. We are family and we need some help. No problem with ending a prayer the same way you started, no problem with praying for something repeatedly. 

1 Thessalonians 5:17 New King James Version (NKJV)
17 pray without ceasing,

Philippians 4:6-7 New King James Version (NKJV)

6 Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God; 7 and the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.

God does love to visit...
· God visited Abraham in the guise of angels who sat down for a meal.
· God visited Jacob, wrestling with him in the night.
· God visited Moses in the burning bush, on Mount Sinai and elsewhere.
· God’s presence went with the Israelites through the wilderness in the form of fire and cloud.
· God visited Samuel as a boy, calling him in his sleeping hours.
· God visited Elijah in a still small voice.
God is with us...
· God is with us throughout shelter-in-place and stay-at-home orders.
· God is with us throughout quarantine.
· God is with us throughout social distancing — God is going to come close.
If you still feel some frustration with the perceived absence of God, there is picture I saw with a quote on it. Mike Tyson training with Cus D'Amato. The picture said, when you sometimes can't hear God remember. The Teacher is quiet during the test. 

The Teacher is quiet when the students are taking the test, the teacher is still there, but watching while the students call back to the things they learned coming up to the test. 

It is quiet because we are waiting, waiting not only on God, but on our soon coming King during this advent season. Waiting for Christ blessed arrival.

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Dry Bones, Breath, and Life


Dry Bones, Breath, and Life
Ezekiel 37:1-14

Ezekiel 37:1-14, the passage on the valley of the dry bones is one of the most famous Old Testament passages, definitely the most popular of the Book of Ezekiel. Ezekiel is more structured than other OT prophet books, and it is one of the few times in the OT that life after death is discussed. About 600 years before Christ, Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon defeated the Hebrew people, the Kingdom of Judah, some of the people we held captive, while others were exiled. The people of God were in disarray and Theologians refer to this period as the exilic period, a byproduct of the period was some of the rich OT literature, and the finalization of the literature that was already out.
This also influenced literature and art for the later years. James Weldon Johnson, author of Lift Every Voice and Sing also penned a song in dialect, you may have heard of…

Dem bones, dem bones, dem dry bones.
Dem bones, dem bones, dem dry bones.
Dem bones, dem bones, dem dry bones.
Now hear the word of the Lord.
Influenced by Ezekiel 37

This passage is pretty popular.
Ezekiel is taken to a valley of dry bones, you can tell a lot about an organism based on its bones. I remember taking a health class in High School and the teacher showing us a skeleton. The teacher asked us to tell if the skeleton was male or female. No one knew how to determine this and after many guesses, the teacher showed us the hipbones, they pointed out, he said that was for child bearing so the skeleton was a woman. You can tell a lot by the bones, that is why we have archeologists digging up fossils and when we have something wrong with us medically we get x-rays.
The bones in the valley were dry, we can relate to dry situations. Trying to look for colleges, find money for colleges, looking for a spouse for the first or second time, struggling to have children, struggling to raise children, health issues, finances, looking for a job, loosing family members, friends, or dealing with our own mortality, we all have dry periods in our lives.
God asks “can these bone live? I wonder what was going through Ezekiel’s mind when God asked him that? The very idea seems preposterous, bones do not get up they stay down. I know we can see the end already but I am wondering what someone like Ezekiel would have thought in this situation. Bones stay down, dry bones are dead and gone, and how do you reconcile that in your mind?  The prophet is told to speak a word that will give life and power, but be have learned not to trust words anymore because we are flooded with them.

We are bombarded constantly with commercials, radio, television, magazines, billboards, news presentations with words all over the screen social media, now companies compete for the “second screen, meaning they know you are watching TV, but looking on your phone or tablet at the same time. I know better than to get on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram on Thursday nights after 9pm CST unless I want Scandal spoiled before I get to watch it.

We have learned not to trust words over time; speed limit signs are merely a suggestion. We know politicians are lying either by omission, commission, or the fact that they really don’t understand how hard it is to pass a bill or really changes laws when it is not their time. Make campaign promises, get to Washington and learn they cant even be on the committee that makes the laws they promised to change because they are a Freshman Senator. We make vows and break them; sign contracts and renege, gossip columns and blogs are more popular than ever. I heard one news reporter say the problem with news now is companies would rather be first to break the story and wrong than fifth to report on it and right. We have stopped placing value on the word.

But the word of God is different than the word of man. When God speaks things happen, the word is still important.
Genesis 1:3
New Revised Standard Version (NRSV)
Then God said, “Let there be light”; and there was light.

Isaiah 55:10-11
New Revised Standard Version (NRSV)
10 For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven,
    and do not return there until they have watered the earth,
making it bring forth and sprout,
    giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater,
11 so shall my word be that goes out from my mouth;
    it shall not return to me empty,
but it shall accomplish that which I purpose,
    and succeed in the thing for which I sent it.

John 1:1
New Revised Standard Version (NRSV)
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.

John 1:14
New Revised Standard Version (NRSV)
14 And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son,[a] full of grace and truth.

Psalm 119:25
New Revised Standard Version (NRSV)
25 My soul clings to the dust;
    revive me according to your word.

You see the idea would seem silly or preposterous to some because they have tried to control their god. God is only as big as they want him to be, they decide what kind of God they have and keep him in a box.

Shubert Ogden said “God is the all inclusive whole of all reality”

Anything less is not God. Even though Man may have failed us, we can rely on God. God has the knowledge that we do not.

God gives a word, and then he gives breath.
Breath is important, we use the word for so many terms, Breathe child breathe, when somebody is shocked or surprised. You can take the air out of the room, when somebody talks a lot with no action we say they are full of hot air. When you try to tell someone something but it is not received well, you are wasting your breath, a burst of energy is called a second wind. When you don’t think something is going to happen you tell people not to hold their breath on it. Breath is important, in the Hebrew the word used for breath in this passage is also used for wind and spirit, ruah or ruach.
God’s word was promising them life, also note how the text says they were promised breath/life but they got put together first. The promise came in verse 5, but the breath did not actually come until verse 10. Dealing with a verse 6-9 moment can be hard but

Isaiah 40:31
King James Version (KJV)
31 But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint.

It is hard waiting but once we are finished waiting we will appreciate the hard times and be glad we went through them. A period of financial hardship will help us appreciate the next time we get money. A period of sickness will force us to take better care of our health. We should be grateful for the waiting period because after the waiting period comes the breath of life.

James Weldon Johnson saw resurrection of a dry dead situation in his life, he was the son of a waiter, went to college, graduated and became an attorney in the late 1800s. Once of his examiners walked out in protest because they did not want to see a Black men become a lawyer. Johnson went from the son of a waiter, to a college graduate, to an attorney. Johnson went on to work on Theodore Roosevelt’s Presidential campaign and was appointed Consul to Venezuela. He had seen a dry situation resurrected and come to life!


The breath of life that can resurrect our dry situation, the breath of life that resurrected Lazarus, the breath that was with Jesus when he gave himself up for us so that we might be saved, so that death does not have the final say over us.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

An Exercise in Humility

An Exercise in Humility


So I had an interesting experience today, I attended an afternoon St. John's day service with my fellow Masonic Brothers. A little background, a St. John's day service is a church program open to the public, where Masons, O.E.S. and Heroines of Jericho gather to celebrate St. John the Baptist and St. John the Evangelist. 

This was my first time attending one as a Local Licensed Pastor, in the United Methodist Church so I wore one of my clerical shirts instead of the usual suit, shirt, and tie. One of my Lodge brothers, who is also a Reverend (Baptist), asked me if I wanted to meet the Pastor of the church, I said yes so we went into the Pastor's office. I experienced something I don't get to see often in other Pastors....humility. The pastor of the church we were visiting let us into his office, sat and spoke with us, insisted we sit in the pulpit with him during the program, prayed with us before he went out, and asked both of us to come back sometime so we could preach at his church!!

I had never seen this before because I am used to pastors who "don't want their anointing disturbed" so they have as little contact with other lowly human beings before preaching. I definitely rarely see pastors offer another pastor they just met an hour ago an opportunity to preach! My experience with other pastors is they are protective of "their" pulpits, even regarding their own Associate Pastors. It was refreshing to meet another colleague who was not too proud to have others sit in the pulpit with him and even if it was a courtesy to offer an opportunity to preach, it was a courtesy I had not experienced before. I look forward to meeting more pastors like the one I met today at Hiram Clarke Missionary Baptist Church in Houston TX.