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, November 22, 2020

A PASTORAL LETTER | Pastor Johnnie Simpson Jr.


Ephesians 1:15-23 (NIV)

15 For this reason, ever since I heard about your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love for all God’s people, 16 I have not stopped giving thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers. 17 I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better. 18 I pray that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may know the hope to which he has called you, the riches of his glorious inheritance in his holy people,19 and his incomparably great power for us who believe. That power is the same as the mighty strength 20 he exerted when he raised Christ from the dead and seated him at his right hand in the heavenly realms, 21 far above all rule and authority, power and dominion, and every name that is invoked, not only in the present age but also in the one to come. 22 And God placed all things under his feet and appointed him to be head over everything for the church, 23 which is his body, the fullness of him who fills everything in every way.

People don't really write letters as much as they used to. Letter-writing has been primarily replaced by email, texts and direct messages, DMs for short. But letters are powerful and important. The September 2017 issue of The Atlantic magazine had a list of what they thought were the most important letters in history. They  had a wide range of types of letters on this list.

Queen Atossa of Persia is credited for writing the very first handwritten letter in 500 B.C. She "established the genre," according to history professor Brid McGrath, "and made letters the most normal, effective form of long-distance communication for millennia." 

Abraham Lincoln wrote five public letters during the Civil War. In one of those letters Lincoln says "I am naturally anti-slavery," "If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong."

In 1939, Albert Einstein sent a letter to President Roosevelt, suggesting that an atomic bomb was possible. Six years later, the United States dropped nuclear weapons on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan.

Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote "Letter from Birmingham Jail," It became the 20th century's most influential essay on civil disobedience, and inspired major civil-rights legislation. I like it personally because he called out the moderates who tried to stay on the fence during the civil rights movement and not get involved because they agreed with what MLK was protesting but not how he was protesting.

As for the "Golden Record" sent into space on the Voyager spacecraft in 1977, it will probably never be read or answered. But it contains a record of who we are as human beings.

But of the letters written that are important to humanity, I would say that some of the letters the Apostle Paul wrote are just as important. It is with those letters we have our guidelines for the church.  In today's scripture reading Paul has written a letter to  a church in Ephesus, this was an ancient Greek city, today it would be Turkey.

Acts 18 tells us that Paul went to Ephesus after leaving Corinth and eventually planted a church there.
This is a Deutero-Pauline letter written to the congregation of the Church at Ephesus, Ephesians is about Jews and Gentiles coming together to form the church. Written around 60 CE. Something interesting about Ephesians is that it talks a lot about how the church is supposed to act never talks about a building. During those times the believers gathered in houses to worship and fellowship, but they don't mention that in Ephesians, why? The church is the people, not where they meet. Paul said that this church has a reputation. The born and bred church people coming together with those who did not grow up in a church and they did it in a hostile environment.

This church was in a city that was popular for three things, commercial trade, governmental oppression, and pagan religions. While in Ephesus Paul spoke truth to power about what was going on there and when he did, enough people stopped worshiping other gods. Reading Acts 19, lets us know that people were buying pagan books and once Paul started teaching, they burned them and didn't buy any more, and didn't go to the shrines anymore. A man of God preaching the word of God upset the economy, other religions, and the government all at once and now a church dedicated to what that man of God was preaching is still in the city. The people of God caring more about what God says instead of political leaders, the people of God caring more about the people than the economy, the people of God focused on their religion instead of conforming to those around them. I recall Paul saying something in Romans 12 about not conforming to the world but being transformed by the renewing of your mind. This Ephesian church had its act together.

THE CONSECRATION OF THIS BODY (1:15-23): Paul prays that God will allow his church to understand four things about himself.

A. Concerning his person (1:15-17): "So that you might grow in your knowledge of God."
Paul has heard about this church,  their reputation has spread. People know of this church they are not just a social club, they are out an about making change in their area. Paul says he has heard of their faith in the Lord, he knows that they are believers, that they love God, and Paul says in that same verse, their love toward the saints. They Love God and Love people and the people know about it. Paul goes on to say that even though they have a good reputation, they love God, they love people, the Ephesian church is  supposed to still grow in wisdom and revelation. The church doesn't have it all figured out, there is still work to do.

B. Concerning his promise (1:18): "So that you can understand the wonderful future he has
promised to those he called." Some translations say hope, something to hope for. Paul wants the church to open their eyes, open their hearts, and take in what is really important. Some translations say the glorious inheritance among the saints.

C. Concerning his power (1:19-20a): "That you will begin to understand the incredible greatness of
his power.... This is the same mighty power that raised Christ from the dead." The same power that rose Christ from the dead is the same power working in you. The same power that got Christ out the grave is the power that will help you and keep you during this pandemic.

D. Concerning his position (1:20b-23)
1. Christ's position in heaven (1:20b-21): He occupies the exalted place at the right hand of the Father himself.
2. Christ's position on earth (1:22-23): He has been appointed head of the church.

Christ is above all things, all dominion, all authorities, all powers, all presidents, all governors, all mayors, all elections and elected officials, all political parties, all companies. You name it, Christ is above it. Christ is above all. There is nothing that should come between you and God, nothing that should come between you and Jesus Christ, even if you think that person is God's chosen one, the created thing cannot be above the creator.

Paul is using present tense in this language the victory is already won. Christ is already sitting at the right hand of the father and if he is sitting at the right hand already the battle is already over. 


Sunday, November 8, 2020

WHO DO YOU REALLY SERVE? | Pastor Johnnie Simpson Jr


In Joshua chapter 24, Joshua is in the twilight of his life, Joshua in chapter 24 is different when compared to Joshua in chapter 1. In Chapter 1 Joshua is getting instructions because he is taking over where Moses left off, now in chapter 24 Joshua has gotten the people together to give them instructions before he goes on to glory. 
 
Joshua has gathered all the Elders, Heads, Judges, and officers of the Tribes of Israel at Shechem to make a covenant. Shechem is a special place, it is one of the places Joseph received when the he was favored in Egypt. The Israelites lost that land then gained it back.
 
Joshua calling all the officials to a place for a covenant was similar to a tradition that the Hittites did when they had a new King or Vassal in place and that was to make a covenant. This ceremony was performed so that all parties could agree on how things were supposed to be going forward. Joshua is talking to the people after the conquests, but before they start to settle in the land.
 
I can see Joshua, like a parent in the parking lot of the store, turning the ignition off, unbuckling their seatbelt, and turning around to the kids in the backseat. “Hey before we go in this store, don’t ask for nothing, don’t touch nothing, behave, act like you got some home training and some common sense.” Parents set the expectation for the behavior before they go into the store. Why, because the parents know their children, they know how they act, and are having this conversation so there can be an understanding. If the kids don’t want to act right once they get in the store, they shouldn’t be surprised about what happens next when they act out.
 
Joshua stopped at Shechem with all the people to get them on the same page  and set the expectations for the Israelites, why, because Joshua knew the Israelites, he knew how they acted, just like a parent knows his children, and wanted to make sure that they were not surprised by what happens next if they went into the promised land acting up. .  
 
Joshua knew how the people had been acting. They have a track record ; In the past, the Israelites had been worshiping other gods. The people of God (big G) had other gods (little g) in their lives and worshiped them. Some of it was from socialization, they lived in areas and were around people who worshiped different gods and took on those religions, some had married people from other nations and took on their gods. The point is that over time, the Hebrew people in the text had allowed other things to come between them and God. They let things come between them and God and the things that came between them became their gods.
 
Did you know that research says that the biggest predictor of future behavior is past behavior? I don’t see them instantly turning away from God, I’m sure it happened over time, little by little. Subtleties like, “Oh, I really don’t feel like studying the scripture today I will do it tomorrow,” then tomorrow comes and goes, days turn into weeks, and months and even years. Or… I think I’m going to miss worship this Sunday, then the Sunday’s just begin to pile up.
 
 I think I’m going to not pray today, then they pile up and before you know it, your prayer life is nonexistent, and people can’t tell the difference between you and a non-believer.
 
It is not about trying to be perfect, but good or bad, a series of small decisions add up, don’t they?  Whether it is skimping out on the job, or not being as attentive in a relationship, or not being diligent in your health things add up over time. Time passed with the people of God and I can see over time as I read the Bible, they had gotten away from serving Jehovah Jireh, the one who provided for them. 
 
This is not new, when we look at the Bible as early as Abraham there were surrounding religions and some of them swayed believers to the them. The Book of Judges tells us that there were Hebrew people worshiping other gods, influenced by those people around them.
 
So…In Joshua 24 verses 2-13 Joshua speaks on the people worshiping other gods, and he speaks on what God has done for them, which is why he wants them to renew their covenant like they did at Mount Sinai. Now look, we know, there are people who can smile in your face, say they are with you and support you but when you are not around betray you and not lose a wink of sleep about it.
 
Unfortunately, The people of God were saying all the right things Joshua wanted to make sure they weren’t just agreeing with no intention of following through. So, he gathered all the people together to offer them guidance and try to get things straight one more time. 
 
Joshua says in verse one of Chapter 24, "thus says the Lord." Whenever you take something on, new old, big, or small, it is best to start with God. Not thus says the GOP, or thus says the DNC, not thus says who you voted for, not thus says your job, not thus says your friends, not thus says your social status, not thus says your achievements, thus says the Lord.
 
 Joshua’s declaration was letting them that this message was from God and not just from Joshua. And it was letting them know the right way to start something. Remember what thus says the Lord. So, if you can’t put God first in everything you do, what good is it?
 
Only what you do for God will last. That is why the songwriter said they would trust in the Lord until they die, that is why Solomon said to trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not to your own understanding. We have to bring God back into everything we do and not make what we do into our own gods. 
 
Gather the right people around you. Joshua gathered the Elders, Judges, heads, and officers of the tribes of Israel together to make sure everyone was on the same page. Being influenced by the wrong people is why the people strayed in the first place. Joshua is telling the people to decide today who you really want to serve, don’t play with it! But actually make a decision and act on it. Live life for glory of God, choose whom you will serve.
 
The people remembered what God has done for them, and we should remember what God has done for you and me. Has he been a doctor in the sick room for you? A lawyer in the courtroom 
 
Have exclusive loyalty to God. Choose today exactly who you will serve. Joshua was telling them no if’s, ands, nor buts, you need to decide today who you really serve. Joshua says as for me and my house we will serve the Lord\ .
 
We all slip up and need reminders from time to time of what God has done. There is still time to turn to God, if you have breath in your lungs and life in your body there is still time to choose the Lord. But we all have a choice to make, each and every day. Thanks be to God that his mercies and grace are new every morning, Amen? This biblical story about Joshua reminding the Israelites about their relationship with God can help us think about our own relationships with God and Christ. A lifetime commitment to Christ is desirable, the part of that which matters is where we are in that commitment day by day. 
 
You see …While some of us may have received Christ and never looked back, never thought about it ever again, others may have had to rethink and recommit to Christ at different points throughout our lives. And that’s ok!
 
It’s not to say they "backslid" in faith, but rather that, as maturing in both thinking processes and life experience occurred, there are moments when we have to examine our faith commitment and ask ourselves, "Do I still affirm this?" or "Can I commit to what I now understand of Christ's call?" And as we did so and decided yes, we emerged with a commitment better suited to deal with the challenges of both daily living and the occasional crises that come to most of us.
 
Jesus said, "No one who puts a hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God" (Luke 9:62), which in some ways is like the New Testament equivalent of the Old Testament story from Joshua. But it's usually not looking back that's happening when we are rethinking our faith commitment, but rather looking ahead and asking if that which we have embraced by faith will be sufficient to carry us as we move forward. You may think you don’t deserve to turn back to God but God’s grace means that you don’t get what you actually deserve for your actions.

Sunday, November 1, 2020

BETTER TOGETHER | Pastor Johnnie Simpson Jr


1 Thessalonians 2:9-13
9 Surely you remember, brothers and sisters, our toil and hardship; we worked night and day in order not to be a burden to anyone while we preached the gospel of God to you.
10 You are witnesses, and so is God, of how holy, righteous and blameless we were among you who believed.
11 For you know that we dealt with each of you as a father deals with his own children,
12 encouraging, comforting and urging you to live lives worthy of God, who calls you into his kingdom and glory.
13 And we also thank God continually because, when you received the word of God, which you heard from us, you accepted it not as a human word, but as it actually is, the word of God, which is indeed at work in you who believe.
There was a professor that was looking to determine some of the differences between humans and chimps so he conducted some experiments to note the differences. One experiment had some 3-year-olds face a challenge. They had to pull together on some ropes, and when they pulled on the rope, a flood of gummy bears raining down and they got to eat a bunch of candy. Then the experiment had one child get more candy than the other. What happened when one gets more than the other? A meltdown, a tantrum or a fight? No. Surprisingly, the 3 year olds shared. If one pointed out that they had less gummy bears, they shared. A number of other studies are pointed to the same conclusion: Human beings have a desire to cooperate. Despite what you see around the world, people have an inborn desire to work jointly toward the same end. We are better together.
Duke professor Michael Tomasello is an expert in this field, and he says that his research is revealing that “we want to cooperate because it’s mutually beneficial to do so. But we also want to cooperate because we want to distribute the spoils of our joint effort fairly, because we ought to.” Tomasello elaborated on the human-chimp gap in a 2011 paper in Nature, one of the world’s leading science journals. One experiment had 2- or 3-year-old children in a room without adults; the kids had to pull together to bring a board, like a seesaw, toward them. On each end of the board were two small toys that they could reach once the board was close enough. As the children pulled, the toys rolled toward them; one child ended up with three toys, while the other ended up with one. The “lucky” child, who had three toys, gave one of the toys to the “unlucky” child, who had one — so that they ended up with the same number toys.
A parallel experiment focused on chimps. The “lucky” chimp never tipped the reward to the “unlucky” partner; the chimp took the reward for itself. For humans, it was all about restoring equity. For chimps, it was all about grabbing what was available to be grabbed. Tomasello wrote in a recent paper, “The Moral Psychology of Obligation.“The most basic comparative fact is that, in situations of free choice with rewards for both partners identical, 3-year-old children mostly collaborate with a partner, whereas chimpanzees mostly choose to go it alone,” 
I also read a story about Sidney Poitier, when Poitier came to the United States he got a job as a house boy, and there was an older gentleman on the job with him that showed him how to do the job. Poitier watched how that man worked, and what that man passed on to him. Poitier said that even though he couldn’t remember the man’s name, he remembered how well that man worked and used that as a reference to how Poitier would go about his work for the rest of his life. We are Better Together
You might say that cooperation, working together deepens the sense of “we” — the notion that we’re all in this together, that we all deserve a share. Cooperation is a quality worth celebrating on All Saints’ Day, when we remember the holy men and women who have worked together to continue the ministry and mission of Jesus. In his first letter to the Thessalonians, the apostle Paul prayed that God would “so strengthen your hearts in holiness that you may be blameless before our God and Father at the coming of our Lord Jesus with all his saints”
Paul was trying to tell the church we are better together in 1 Thessalonians, one of the earliest letters from Paul to a church. Paul experienced a suffering dealing with the Thessalonians similar to what he did in Philippi. Acts 16 tells us that Paul and Silas were beaten and put in prison in Pillippi for casting a demon out a woman who was fortune telling to benefit the business owners.  Paul founded a church in Thessalonica, but had to leave right after the church was founded, while he was away the Thessalonians were persecuted. Paul was worried that the people might think he abandoned the church. Paul was also worried that because the Thessalonians would think Paul abandoned the church, the people of that church might abandon their faith. 

The Thessalonians were being persecuted, they formed this church in an area where there were other religions. There people worshiping idols, other gods. There were trade and craft guilds that had religious elements to them, people had turned their jobs into a religion, there were also imperial cults, religions that worshiped the government. Can you imagine people wanting to worship a government leader? The people of that time were under Roman oppression, the phrase Jesus is Lord was scandalous back then because the people were saying Ceasar is Lord, and the government did not want people declaring their allegiance to anything else. Can you imagine someone wanting to put a government official that high? The Thessalonians were experiencing just that but instead of just being called unpatriotic, or someone going on a Facebook rant about it there were permanent consequences, death, torture. This was real persecution, not someone saying Happy Holidays instead of Merry Christmas. The Thessalonians experienced some serious oppression. The Thessalonians were trying to do the work of God and worship with their very lives on the line. 

Sometimes when you are stuck in a bad situation, the way to go forward is to look back. Paul tells them that they should remember the labor and toil, they should remember how hard everyone worked while they were with them. Paul says that in the midst of the struggle Paul and the leaders of the church worked day and night in order not to be a burden to anyone else. I looked through all the commentaries I could and all the Greek pointed to that word burden being financial…the people worked to put money into the church and to take care of themselves instead of taking money out of the church. Paul and the church leaders worked, and they preached the Gospel to others. They practiced stewardship and evangelism. The government was pressing against the people, they were surrounded by competing religions, they had trouble on all sides and their response was to keep working and preach the gospel. Rough times did not weaken the Thessalonians faith, it did not stop their walk. They were committed, they persisted, they didn’t give up and say we can’t do this anymore so there is no need to try. The people worked to support the church, and they worked to support others. 

Paul has a format to his letters and there is almost always a portion of Thanksgiving, where Paul thanks God for what God has done, and even thanks the people of the church he is writing. But in this letter Paul has so much to be thankful about that it takes up most of the letter. Paul looks at the situation and thanks God continually for the work that is still going on in spite of the surrounding situation. I know it seems rough right now, but you still woke up this morning, I know it seems rough right now, but you are still in your right mind, with food on the table, clothes on your back, breath in your lungs. And most importantly you have the word of God. I don’t much else right now if I have a word. A word lets me know that weeping may endure for a night but Joy will come in the morning, a word lets me know that many are the afflictions of the righteous but the lord will deliver me from them, a word lets me know that no weapon formed against me shall prosper, a word lets me know that he who began a good work in me shall perform until completion until the day of Christ Jesus, word lets me know they that wait upon the lord, shall renew their strength, they shall mount up with wings of eagles, run and not grow weary, walk and not faint, the grass withers, and the flower fades but the word of God lasts forever. If Paul can thank God continually because the people received the word, then so can I. 

The people of God work to support the church, work to support each other, and they work because God is at work in them. The reason the people of God back then are able to work while the world is falling apart around them is the same reason the people of God can work while the world is falling apart around them today. Because they have a power greater than them working on the inside of each and every one of them. Paul was looking to help the Thessalonians, but they already had some help they just didn’t realize it yet. If we are going to “lead a life worthy of God,” we are challenged to follow the path of Jesus and become the people that God made us to be. This means receiving the word of God, as the Thessalonians did, but also seeing that God’s word is already at work in us. God wants us to cooperate with one another, and he sends this message through both Holy Scripture and through our bodies, hearts and minds.

There is somebody watching you and how you work, and they are taking whatever work you are passing on. Are you passing on evangelism or are you passing on “I don’t want the church to get too big? Are you passing on sharing the gospel of Jesus Christ to everyone you can? Are you passing on Stewardship? Or are you passing on, the choir better sing the songs I want, the pastor better not step on my toes, I don’t need to go to church or participate in anything and they better not take me off the roll…? What kind of work are you passing on to others watching you? 

As believers we have to be willing to cooperate with what God wants and cooperate with each other, the Bible tells us that the power of God is in us when we do these things. The power that help Christ live a life for us, sacrifice himself for us, raise from the dead for us, and we await his return.  

Saturday, October 31, 2020

BREAK ME | Pastor Johnnie Simpson Jr


1 Corinthians 11:23-24

For I received from the Lord 
 
what I also passed on to you: 
 
The Lord Jesus, ///
 
on the night he was betrayed,
 
took bread, 
 
and when he had given thanks,
 
he broke it and said, 
 
“This is my body, which is for you;
 
do this in remembrance of me.”

Break is such a striking word, we use it for so many different situations. 
When we want to stop working for a bit we take a break on the job
When a relationship comes to an end or we are disappointed we experience Heartbreak 
Break boards for martial arts test
We says you are Breaking up when you they have poor reception on a cell phone
Breaking bones when people are injured
In Football huddles they say break. 
The sun rises we call it the break of day
Something can break a fall
Break bread - stop and dine together
Break camp - pack up and leave
You can break the law
You break barriers, sound barrier,
You break records.

Whenever the word break is used, there is an interruption a pause, something different is happening. All the synonyms for the word lead us to that same understanding. Crack, gap, hole, breach, cleft, discontinuity, rupture, schism, split, tear, and so on and so on. Whether good or bad, when something breaks, it is changed. 

Paul was trying to change some things in his letter to the church at Corinth, written about 53-54AD the church had some issues and Paul addressed them in his letter. One issue Paul addressed was that the church had divided itself into groups, and those groups decided they didn’t need to eat together for communion. Those who had means could get to the church first, have their meal and those who were still working got to church later and had nothing left to eat. Paul was not happy, Paul said in verses 17 though 22: 

17 Now in giving these instructions I do not praise you, since you come together not for the better but for the worse. 18 For first of all, when you come together as a church, I hear that there are divisions among you, and in part I believe it. 19 For there must also be factions among you, that those who are approved may be recognized among you. 20 Therefore when you come together in one place, it is not to eat the Lord’s Supper. 21 For in eating, each one takes his own supper ahead of others; and one is hungry and another is drunk. 22 What! Do you not have houses to eat and drink in? Or do you despise the church of God and shame those who have nothing? What shall I say to you? Shall I praise you in this? I do not praise you.

Paul was clearly not happy about the division in the church and how they are treating each other. I can imagine the handwriting getting harder and harder on the letter as Paul is writing. They had separated themselves. We have churches that don’t look anything like the neighborhood they sit in, and may only interact with the neighborhood for missions projects. We break from others not like us where we live, where we eat out before the pandemic, where we socialize, where we worship.

Paul didn’t like for the church members to think they are better than one another and separating because they are different. Paul said when they separate, it is not for the better but for worse. Paul says if you are not going to eat that special meal together, you might as well stay at home and not come at all. Sounds strange to read this in the Bible close to 2000 years ago and then I look at our churches. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said 

Unfortunately, most of the major denominations still practice segregation in local churches, hospitals, schools, and other church institutions. It is appalling that the most segregated hour of Christian America is eleven o'clock on Sunday morning, the same hour when many are standing to sing: "In Christ There Is No East Nor West. - Martin Luther King. 

The break in the Corinthian church probably could have developed because of culturally engrained practices that had wormed their way into the faith community. For example, those accustomed to eating with others who, like them, had plenty of resources, continued to do so when they assembled as the church. In other words, some church members had allowed their socioeconomic differences to transform the Lord’s meal into just another common, everyday meal in which their taken-for-granted boundaries excluded other believers.

We confuse being unified with being same. We have differences that should not be ignored. My lived experience is just as real your lived experience, I don’t want you to ignore my differences I want you to see them, acknowledge them, and respect them, definitely not exclude them.

Paul tells the church the what they are trying to exclude from others is not actually theirs to exclude. The church got it from Paul, and Paul got it from Christ. Paul said that we need to break our routines because Christ broke himself for us. 

What the savior did
He gathered the disciples together for a communal meal knowing that he was going to be betrayed. All together gathered in this room to have a communal meal together. All were at the table none excluded. This one of the earliest recordings of communion in scripture. Everyone together in one accord.

Jesus was giving them a visual example of what he was going to do and told them to remember it, practice it, use it experience Christ all over again. Sacred. 

Bob Stamps said - A sacrament is God coming to help us by means of a created thing. Faith needs something to touch, faith needs something to do.

The Christian experience was never meant to be a solitary one, with everyone just wanting to work on just his or her own spiritual relationship away from everyone else. The writer of Hebrews said, “And let us consider how to provoke one another to love and good deeds, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day approaching” (10:24-25).

One of my seminary professors, Dr. Jamie Clark-Soles said that you cannot be a Christian outside of community. 

Scripture tells us over and over again that this lived experience is supposed with others. 
James 1:25-25
Matthew 22

What the savior said
Jesus told them that just like this bread they were sharing together was broken, Jesus was was going to be broken like that for them. For all of them, not a few, not the ones from the same neighborhood, or spoke the same language, or had the same level of income, or had the same education. Jesus was going to break himself for all of the people. 

Christ gave himself for all, and all means all. Jesus came with a body, to a body, for a body, and broke the body the save everybody. Jesus said that he gave himself up for us, some translations say that he gave himself up on our behalf. 

We need something to touch sometimes to experience God. Jesus had the disciples come together and gave them a cup to share and bread to break to give them a visual, tangible reminder for the disciples back then and the disciples today to practice to remind them of what Jesus did for them. We need to break ourselves from our usual understanding in life, we need to be broken from what makes us comfortable, we need to break ourselves from a thinking that we are better than anyone else. We need to allow ourselves to be broken and we need to allow ourselves to come together.

That’s the idea of the church. The church isn’t solitary Christians in our own cubicles; it’s a fellowship of followers of Jesus Christ. Paul wrote his letter almost 2000 years ago. Just as Jesus broke the bread he broke his body. We are the body of Christ and believe there is something he wants to break in us. Create a Crack, gap, hole, breach, cleft, discontinuity, rupture, schism, split, tear, and so on and so on in us, that we may be one in Christ for the transformation of the world.

Communion, the common meal of the church, reminds us of the importance to our own spiritual experience of the community’s experience of faith. In that sense, what we do when we come to communion in church is “eat out.” We get spiritual sustenance in the company of others. We need to break our habits of isolating because Jesus broke some things when he broke himself with the work of the cross. The work done on Calvary, the work done in the borrowed tomb, the work done when he rose from the grave, and the reason we wait on him because he is coming back again. Jesus broke us. 

Jesus broke the penalty, power, and presence of sin
Jesus broke the bondage of death and the grave
Jesus broke the barrier separating us from eternal life. 

Sunday, October 18, 2020

QUARANTINED OUTCASTS - Pastor Johnnie Simpson Jr





I’ve been doing a lot of reading lately, someone once told me that leaders are readers so I am trying to read. I am going through a lot of of audio and electronic books, I have been reading some about Racism and race relations (The Radical King by Cornell West, White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo, So You Want to Talk About Race by Olu Ijeoma, and The Souls of Black Folk by W. E. B. Dubois), I have been reading business books (Leadership on the Line by Ronald Heifetz and Marty Linsky, Canoeing the Mountains by Tod Bolsinger, Switch by Chip Heath, The Coaching Habit Micheal Bungay Stanier), and I have also been reading a lot about psychology (The Big Leap by Gay Hendricks, It’s Not Always Depression by Hilary Jacobs Hendel, and the Joy of Genius also by Gay Hendricks). The Psychology books have been great and I have noticed a theme among them and the professional athletes I have seen interviewed lately. Gratitude and Mindfulness, focusing on the situation at hand and being thankful for the present, not worried about the past which you can’t change, not worried about the future which you can’t control either but being in the moment you are right now and being thankful for where you are. Lots of books out there on mindfulness and gratitude, but the fact is there is nothing new under the sun. Mindfulness and gratitude have been around for quite some time. In today’s passage from Luke, Jesus is on a road trip, going between Samaria and Galilee on his way to Jerusalem. As he enters a village, 10 lepers approach him and call out from a distance, raising their voices in together yelling, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!” They were calling out from a distance because they had leprosy. 

Leprosy was a major issue back then, Leviticus had 2 whole chapters on Leprosy. The ailment called “leprosy” in the Bible was different from the disease we know as “leprosy” today (properly called “Hansen’s disease”). Hansen’s disease is a serious disorder caused by bacterial infection, whose symptoms are ulcerations, loss of feeling in certain nerve regions, or loss of fingers and toes. This form of leprosy is worse than to the leprosy  in the Bible. The term “leprosy” recorded in the Bible could mean a variety of skin diseases, which probably ranged from simple blemishes to serious rashes to more serious fungal and bacterial infections. Lepers were, therefore, somewhat common. While we do not know exactly what was going on when someone had leprosy in the Bible, we do know that they would be considered unclean. Being considered unclean meant that they had to announce themselves wherever they went, yelling out “unclean, unclean!” Leprosy meant they were ostracized, they were outcast from the community, the people were scared that the sickness they had could spread to surfaces, and to other people so that meant they had to be quarantined. The people who had the sickness understood that and did what what was needed. It is not hard to imagine a sickness ravaging your body and no one wanting to be around you because of it. No one wanting to come in contact with you, or even touch the same things you touched because of the sickness. That is a horrible place to be in, and in that horrible place is where the men saw Jesus. 

I. THE MIRACLE (17:11-19)
A. The request of the ten (17:11-14)
1. The circumstances (17:11-12): Jesus is met by ten lepers. 
Some translations say ten lepers but other more literal translations say 10 men with leprosy, we have to be aware of when we label people. Their condition, their beliefs, their political affiliation even, is not all that they are. You may have sinned, but you are not a perpetual sinner, you may have messed up, but you are better than that. Just like we can’t just only call these men by their condition, we cannot think of other people like that either. What if you were only known by a condition that you cannot control, or only known by your worse mistake? We have to watch how we treat people because if not for the grace of God, there go I. We are all a couple of decisions away form our whole lives being turned upside down. Some of us are not a couple of decisions away from it some of are a couple of things being exposed that would change up our whole situation. We are all so called Lepers and Samaritans in our own ways. 

2. The cry (17:13): They call out to him for help.
The men with Leprosy knew they had come into contact with the one that could help them, they said Jesus, Master, have mercy on us. That was not the normal cry for those with Leprosy during those times. They would have normally been crying out that they were unclean, after letting everyone know they were unclean, the next thing they would have done in those times would be to ask for alms. Money, some sort of temporary support to get them through the day, but they knew they were in the presence of the healer and instead of asking for something to change their day they asked for something to change their lives. 
3. The command (17:14a): He tells them to present themselves to the Temple priests. 
Jesus told them to go the priest, time and time again in the Bible when there is a miracle there are some instructions to follow. There was a protocol to going from unclean to clean, Leviticus tells us that the Priest determined when a person and Even Jesus told them once he healed them to go to the Priest. In the midst of a miracle there were still some instructions and some protocols. Jesus did not heal them in spite of of the protocols in place, he healed them and still instructed them to follow the protocols. Leviticus 13 tells us to 
4. The cleansing (17:14b): Their leprosy disappears en route!
We serve a savior that can move in our lives immediately when we take our stuff to him, while we are still moving around the healing and the cleansing can take place. While we are praying about it the prayer can be answered, while we are fixing our mouths to say Lord what am I going to do? What needs to be done is getting done and the same power that healed the men with leprosy is the same power working through us today., 
B. The return of the one (17:15-19)
1. Who he is (17:16b): He is a Samaritan. 
That is important because while we have taken these bible stories and applied different meaning to them being a Samaritan wasn’t popular during those times, we call somebody doing a good deed a Good Samaritan because of the parable but people from Samaria were not on good terms with the other people. The Romans liked them, and they liked the Romans, but if you were from one of the other areas being oppressed by the Roman government you would not like them. 
2. Why he comes (17:15-16a)
a. That he might give testimony to God the Father (17:15)
b. That he might give thanks to God the Son (17:16a) 
The proper response when God moves in your life is to be thankful, show some gratitude, understand where your help comes from and give them some credit for doing it. Our purpose on this Earth is to worship. Worship the one who created us, worship the one who was and is and is to come, worship the Alpha and the Omega the beginning and the end. The man who had sense enough to turn around and come back to say thank you is our example in this thing called life. Understand that we didn’t get here by our own power and we ought to be thankful. 
Look at me, I'm a testimony,
I didn't make it on my own,
I'm not standing here all alone.
It is Jesus who gave me this opportunity,
look at me, I'm a testimony.
3. What he finds (17:17-19)
a. The sadness of Jesus (17:17-18): The Savior expresses regret over the nine who do not return.
Jesus would want all to be healed and Jesus would want all to be thankful but that is not always the case. Everyone does not have the right mindset and you learn that when times get better for them. Some people are only humble because their circumstances are making them act that way. Jesus healed 10 people but only 1 saw fit to come back and say something about that. 
b. The salvation from Jesus (17:19): Jesus tells the Samaritan that his faith has resulted in healing of both body and soul! 
Your faith has made you well, just tarrying a little longer the tenth man with leprosy not only got some healing for his body but he got some healing for his soul. That little bit extra went a long way. 
I am so glad that Jesus healed the men with Leprosy but I am even more glad about the one who came back, because not only did we learn about his condition but we also learned about his location. We all have some unclean things in our lives, it may not be sickness or disease, but it is there, and we all can be on the wrong side of something but Jesus still saved them and we ought to be thankful.