Friday, December 28, 2007

WHAT I AM READING THIS WEEK



This interview appears in the Dec. 28 issue of “National Catholic Reporter.
This book is a thought provoking, sometimes humorous look at trying to obey all the commands in the Bible. I highly recommend it if you have ever wondered what it would be like to try and keep all of the Old Testament rules. Here is one guy's attempt. You will laugh, ask yourself some hard questions, and have to wonder about the parts of the Bible that we tend to pick and choose. P. Eugene


”Sometimes it’s hard enough just dealing with one biblical command, such as to love our neighbors. Writer A.J. Jacobs took it quite a bit further. For one year he tried to follow all of the Bible’s commands, including stoning sinners. He chronicles his experiences in the funny and informative new book “The Year of Living Biblically: One Man’s Humble Quest to Follow the Bible as Literally as Possible.”
“I went into it with an open mind to find out what, if anything, I was missing in not having had a religious background,” he said during a telephone interview from Philadelphia, one stop on a 20-city book tour.
Jacobs, 39, an editor at “Esquire Magazine,” grew up in a non-religious Jewish household. He writes that he had never prayed. For his biblical year, though, he had to pray several times a day. It was strange at first -- he jokes that he had never said Lord, except when followed by "of the Flies" and never said God unless preceded by "Oh my."
Having never read more than bits and pieces of the Bible, he began by spending five hours a day for a month reading different versions in their entirety. He had experience with such marathon reading, having for a previous book, “The Know-It-All,” read the entire Encyclopedia Britannica, all 44 million words, from cover to cover.
But this time, “the more I read, the more I absorbed the fact that the Bible isn’t just another book,” he writes. “I love my encyclopedia, but the encyclopedia hasn’t spawned thousands of communities based on its words. It hasn’t shaped the actions, values, deaths, love lives, warfare and fashion sense of millions of people over three millennia. No one has ever been executed for translating the encyclopedia into another language . . . No president has been sworn in with the encyclopedia. It’s intimidating, to say the least.”
From the bibles, he typed up a list of more than 700 commandments, focusing on one each day, “while keeping the others in my peripheral vision.” He followed not just the big, well-known rules like the Ten Commandments, but ones like not wearing mixed fibers (Lev. 19:19); he had his clothes tested by an Orthodox Jew who makes house calls to do this. He quickly learned no aspect of his life would be unaffected -- not the way he ate, dressed, talked, or touched his wife. He visited communities where the Bible is taken literally, the Amish country and Orthodox Jews in Israel, and consulted with a variety of Jewish and Christian authorities.
The first thing to change was his appearance. He grew a full beard, in keeping with Lev. 19:27. Then his actions. He began censoring 20 percent of his sentences before they left his mouth because of the Bible’s rigorous language laws. “Is it a lie,” he asked himself. “Is it a boast? Is it a curse? Is it gossip?”
He blew a ram’s horn to mark the start of each month, participated in a service of animal sacrifice in Brooklyn, herded sheep in Israel and found solace in prayer. For one of his funniest practices, he found a way to fulfill the law to stone a Sabbath violator -- he got tiny pebbles from Central Park and, pretending to stumble, dropped them on the shoes of a man at his neighborhood Avis office who had worked both Saturday and Sunday. In that way he kept a biblical law, but it left him with questions that would follow him throughout the year: “How can the Bible be so wise in some places and so barbaric in others? And why should we put any faith in a book that includes such brutality?”
Illustrating that duality was another of his motives for the project. He writes that he wanted to “take legalism to its extreme and show that it leads to religious idiocy. What better way to demonstrate the absurdity of Jewish and Christian fundamentalism? If you actually follow all the rules, you’ll spend your days acting like a crazy person.”
But showing this in the extreme has opened him up to accusations that he was acting as a stunt journalist. A New York Times’ review criticized the book as being a “reality-show version of living by the rules set forth in the Bible,” while another said he was “keeping the joke alive for 365 days.”
Jacobs maintains the opposite is true.“It was a genuine spiritual journey that changed me in significant ways. Ironically, most religious people see it that way and are happy I took it seriously.”
What attempting to follow the arbitrary laws points out, he says, is that everyone, even the fundamentalists, actually practice cafeteria religion.“I came to the conclusion you have to do some picking and choosing,” he said. “There’s nothing wrong with the cafeteria approach. I've had some delicious meals in cafeterias. It’s all about choosing the right parts, the ones about compassion and helping others instead of the parts that lead to exclusion. If you engage the Bible that way it can be incredibly relevant and important.”
He says he hasn’t heard any complaints from either fundamentalist Jews or Christians, although he has received some e-mails from people praying he will convert to Christianity. In fact, the book has been so well received it hit the New York Times best seller list within weeks of its release last month and Paramount has optioned the film rights.“My behavior and thoughts have changed in a much more profound way that I had expected,” he says, mentioning cursing -- “I don’t do as much,” gossiping, which he does less of -- “or at least I feel guilty” and coveting -- “I’ve definitely cut down.”
He also joined a temple and enrolled his son Jasper in Hebrew school.
And while the beard is gone, saved now in a plastic bag under the kitchen sink, and he’s stopped stoning sabbath violators and gone back to wearing mixed fibers, he will tithe eight percent of the book’s profits and he continues to pray.
“The idea of thankfulness was a huge change in my perspective. I try to be thankful for the hundreds of things that go right all day instead of concentrating on the few that go wrong.”
posted by Eugene Smith

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

HOW TO DEAL WITH REJECTION

Here are a few thoughts I have about Sunday's sermon. This area of rejection is huge in our lives. We have all experienced the pain of being rejected by others who are close to us. Some people reject me and it doesn't effect me at all. But when people who are close to me and for whom I have respect reject me, it really is painful.

Below are a few highlights from my notes and thoughts on "How To Overcome Rejection." You can also go to our media center and listen to the message online.

After you come to Jesus there are 4 practical things you can put into practice to overcome rejection in your life.

1. Let Go -- Release your expectation that others are here to make you happy.
Most rejection takes place because of our expectation that someone else can or should make us fulfilled and happy. The reality is that it will never happen -- not fully anyway. Our identity and security can only truly be found in our life in Christ.
Matthew 16: 24-25 (NKJV): Then Jesus said to His disciples, "If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me. For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it."
Coming to Christ means we must give up our rights and expectations that others will make us happy. Rejection is one of the primary lessons of discipleship that must be dealt with if we are going to move on to maturity in Christ. This idea that we have a right to be treated a certain way, or a right to have someone else make us happy, leads to great disappointment and frustration.

2. Outbig 'em – This is a lesson that is one learns over a lifetime of experiencing rejection. My wife and I have a saying we go back to when someone says something stupid or attacks us: “Consider the source.” You don’t get in a verbal war with others or try to make them pay for the rejection or pain they have brought into your life. You do exactly the opposite.
Here are some of the most difficult words of Jesus:
Matthew 5:43-46 (NKJV): You have heard that it was said, "You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy." But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use you and persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven; for He makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust. For if you love those who love you, what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors do the same?

3. Accept God’s Purpose -- Victory goes to those who accept God's purpose.
Ephesians 1:3-7 (NLT): How we praise God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly realms because we belong to Christ.
Long ago, even before he made the world, God loved us and chose us in Christ to be holy and without fault in his eyes.
His unchanging plan has always been to adopt us into his own family by bringing us to himself through Jesus Christ. And this gave him great pleasure. So we praise God for the wonderful kindness he has poured out on us because we belong to his dearly loved Son. He is so rich in kindness that he purchased our freedom through the blood of his Son, and our sins are forgiven.


4. Seek to Excel in Love
1 John 3:13-16 (NLT): So don't be surprised, dear brothers and sisters, if the world hates you. If we love our Christian brothers and sisters, it proves that we have passed from death to eternal life. But a person who has no love is still dead. Anyone who hates another Christian is really a murderer at heart. And you know that murderers don't have eternal life within them. We know what real love is because Christ gave up his life for us. And so we also ought to give up our lives for our Christian brothers and sisters.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

CHRISTMAS TIME

This past Monday a number of local chuch pastors and their staff joined together at Faith Assembly of Orlando for a Christmas celebration. It was a great time of food, fun, and fellowship.
The pastors even got a little crazy as they put reindeer antlers on their heads and were made to form a Reindeer bell ringing choir. Justin Fennel was the MC for the night and really did a great job of making every one relax and take a break for a few moments this holiday season.

You can see from my new pic that we had a very special guest attend this party. His name is John Morgan, and he has gained national recognition for having a very familiar look. He was a hoot... and he tolerated a lot of picture-taking with the crowd. It was probably one of the warmest receptions he has had in a while.

Laura and I have been attending these functions for about seven years and have found this to be a fun tradition for us. It's one way we keep up with other ministries in the Central Florida community.

Traditions have gotten my attention lately. The word means "a set of practices or beliefs that are handed down from generation to another." It is a word rich in meaning, and a word that at times can get a bad rap.
One of the traditions in our home at Christmas is my Laura's "Church Windows" that she makes every year. It is a simple chocolate holiday treat that her mother and grandmother made -- and she is keeping the tradition going. She always makes enough to give to our neighbors. After putting them on a nice plate and wrapping them up, we go to our neighbors' homes and wish them a merry Christmas. It is a great tradition we have been doing our whole married life.

Another tradition from my side of the family is to read the Christmas story every year before we open presents. My father did it when I was growing up, I have been doing since my kids were born, and I am ready to pass it on to my son Austin.... It is a tradition -- something that our family and friends look forward to; something that adds richness and depth to lives, which times seem to whirl by with connecting points. Traditions can give hope, acting as an anchor connecting your past to your future. It is during these times that I have had many "Ah ha" experiences. Moments of tradition make your heart warm up, maybe even bring a tear to your eye as you remember people, places, and events from yesteryear.

This Christmas season take time to enjoy the traditions of your home. If your family hasn't developed any consistent traditions around this time of year, take the lead and start one. Give something your family can pass on to another generation.

Merry Christmas

Saturday, December 1, 2007

SATURDAY NIGHT PRAYER

Tonight was one of those nights that is really hard to explain. Today on the City Church campus was packed with activity. The youth ministry is stepping up to the next level in Audio/Visual ministry. They are learning how to use the lights and the soundboard, and are practicing worship for hours. It was so awesome to see so many young people giving their all for God. I believe it is one of the reasons God chose to visit us tonight in such a powerful way.

The Saturday night prayer meeting began at the beginning of our ministry here in Orlando. At first we had prayer on a Friday night once a month. For the first several years of City Church's existence, the core team would fast the first Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of every month. We would finish by meeting in our home with a time of prayer, then go out to eat afterward. Some very intense spiritual times would take place.

Over the years we shifted to a Saturday night meeting in my office upstairs. I think we did this every week with a couple of the people who were living with us at the time. It was hard to keep the prayer meetings going because we didn't have our own facility. But as the Lord provided for us we started meeting with our leadership team every Saturday night.

Upon moving to Sanford we continued the prayer meeting, but the attendance was very sporatic at first. For quiet a while ten to fifteen people would attend. It slowly grew, and over the past couple of years the attendance has grown to a almost sixty on a weekly basis.

Tonight's prayer meeting was an incredible time of worship. The roar of prayer ascended, and we could feel the presence of God's spirit in a powerful way. It reminded me of times of revival in the past. From my reading of church history it seems to me that there has never been a true move of God that was not preceded by a time of deep intercession and prayer by God's people.

I am not sure what the long-term result will be, but I do know that we will reap what we sow. As City Church continues to press into God through prayer and times of worship, I believe that we will experience a visitation of the Spirit that could only be attributed to the prayers and cries of God's people.

Maybe you have not been to a Saturday night prayer meeting. You may feel as if you already have too much church in your life. I would say that this meeting is probably one of the most life-changing meetings you will ever be a part of. This hour of power will determine the success or failure of our impact in the city of Sanford and the surrounding communities. I really can't think of a more important thing you could do on a Saturday night than to seek God for one hour with His people.

Many Christians wonder why the church doesn't see the miracles like they did in the Bible. Could it be that we don't pray like the church in the Bible did? The early church was know for its intensity in prayer and its supernatural power.

Someone once said that "the American church prays for three minutes, preaches for one hour, and sees one person touched. The early church prayed for three hours, preached for three minutes, and saw thousands come into Kingdom."

If you are looking for more of God, and you want to experience His presence in a very real and tangible way, I invite you to join us at "The Hour of Power" on Saturday nights at 7:00 pm. You won't regret it. You will be part of what God is doing in the world today.