Archive for July, 2009

Strengthened by the Father

Ephesians 3:14-17

This sermon was preached by Rev. Chris Roberts during the morning service on Sunday, July 26, 2009.

Due to technical problems, there is no audio of this sermon. Below are the sermon notes.

After a few weeks away from Ephesians we return this morning, picking up with Ephesians 3:14-21. This passage contains another prayer for believers. This morning we will look at the first part of the prayer, taking the rest next time.

In Ephesians Paul has divided the letter between how we should think and what we should do. This is a common feature of Paul’s writings as he first shapes our thinking then shapes our doing. Some Christians seem to have the idea that an intellect shaped to the things of Christ is unnecessary. The shape of our thoughts is generally unimportant so long as we are obedient to the things of God. Paul would disagree. Right doing comes from right thinking, and a great deal of Paul’s energy in the New Testament is given to helping Christians think the right things about themselves and about God.

Here, chapters 1-3 focus on what we should think about God, ourselves, salvation, the church, and the unity of God’s people. Chapters 4-6 shift to focus on how we should live as believers.

Neither of these sections is exclusive. As Paul shapes our thinking in chapters 1-3 he is also giving powerful implications for how we should live. Likewise, as we are told how to live in 4-6 we also learn more about how to think as believers.

With our passage today we come right up to the division. Paul closes the first half of this letter with a prayer for the people. We saw one prayer at Ephesians 1:15-19. The second prayer is in Ephesians 3:14-19 with a doxology in verses 20-21. In the earlier prayer Paul wants believers to know the power of God that is at work in them. In today’s prayer Paul wants us to know the love God has for us. But it starts with a reminder of the strength given to us by the Father. Let’s start today by reading the whole prayer, Ephesians 3:14-21, but our focus in this sermon will be verses 14-17.

Ephesians 3:14-21

Paul opens his prayer by describing the direction of his prayer and his posture. The direction is to the Father. He is not casting his prayers to the wind, he is aimed at the Father of the Lord Jesus Christ. This is how Jesus taught us to pray, praying to our Father.

Paul’s posture is kneeling. This is descriptive, not prescriptive. Paul is telling them how he is praying at this moment, not how they must always pray. But we learn that this is a good posture for Christians to take when praying. It is a position of humility, a position that shows we recognize how serious this business of prayer is.

Paul also teaches the Ephesians why it is worthwhile to pray to the Father. He says of the Father in verse 15, from whom every family in heaven and on earth is named. There is some question as to what family Paul refers to – does he mean God’s family, saved humanity, both those in Heaven and those on earth? Or does he refer to every group of creatures within creation, angels and humans, saved and fallen? In the Greek both are possible. It could be that Paul wanted the ambiguity since either way his point remains the same.

The Father is said to be the one who names every family. In Paul’s culture to name something is to have authority over it. You attempt to define the character of something by the name you give it. The Father is described as one who has authority to name more than just a few children, he names everything in creation. He has authority over all things. This includes authority over his church, which is his immediate family of adopted children, and it includes all other creatures. Nothing escapes his control. Christian, pray to your Father with the knowledge that he has the ability to shape every event to his will. Your prayers are not in vain, you pray to the one who bends worlds.

There are three main parts to Paul’s prayer. In verses 16-17 Paul asks God to strengthen believers through the Holy Spirit, filling them with Jesus Christ; in 17-19 he wants believers to know the immeasurable greatness of the love of Christ, and in verse 19 he seeks the fullness of God in every believer.

The whole prayer hinges on what he says at the start in verses 16-17a: that according to the riches of his glory he may grant you to be strengthened with power through his Spirit in your inner being, that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith…

Why would Paul ask for believers to be strengthened with power through the Spirit? We are already born again, already a new creation! Why is there a need for more strength? Although we have been saved the war continues to rage around us. Every day we face continued pressure from the world, pressure to give in, to abandon God, to jump back into the world’s ways. Every day we are tempted to rely on the power of our hand, trusting our strength to win the battle. But we are powerless without the power of God at work within us.

When we are saved God does not dump on us all the strength we will ever receive. We do not have to ration his strength, hoping to make it stretch the rest of our lives. God will strengthen us throughout our lives as we walk with him. We need constant renewal, constant power, or we will fail.

The source of this strength is the Holy Spirit. The Spirit has been sent to all believers to guide us, instruct us, comfort us, and empower us. Christians are said to battle between the flesh and the Spirit. In Romans 8:9 Paul says, You, however, are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if in fact the Spirit of God dwells in you. You cannot survive the Christian life without the Spirit. From what Paul says, you aren’t even a Christian without the Spirit.

But how much power does the Spirit have to give? How much can he strengthen me? How long until his reserves run out? Paul tells us in verse 16 the Spirit strengthens us according to the riches of his glory or, as some translations have it, his glorious riches. Later we will take a closer look at the closing of Paul’s prayer when he says in verse 20 that God is able to do far more abundantly than all we ask or think. I can imagine God doing a great deal, and doing it for every individual who has ever lived or ever will live. But Paul says this does not even scratch the surface of God’s potential. I fancy that I am able to think big, to dream great things, but I am so finite I cannot even begin to fathom the limitless depths of God’s power.

Christian, never fear the level of God’s strength. He has all sovereign power in the universe and he has promised to use this for his glory and your good. These are the same thing. When he is glorified, you are blessed. Remember the assurance of Philippians 1:6, And I am sure of this, that he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ. He has power to sustain you and has promised to finish what he started.

But what has he promised to sustain? As Christians, do we have a guarantee of luxury, of the easy life, of pampered flesh and good things on earth? Pick any page of the Bible at random and you will find examples that quickly discount this idea. God has not promised physical comfort on earth. This is why Paul says in verse 16 that God will strengthen you in your inner being. It is your soul, not your flesh, that God will nurture. In 2 Corinthians 4:16 Paul tells us, So we do not lose heart. Though our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day.

Our physical bodies are crumbling. One day they will be dust. There is no promise of comfort to this shell I am walking around in. But you are more than the shell. You are not your body. God will strengthen you, not this lump of water and flesh. When I am strengthened then my body will be able to endure greater hardship making difficult times easier to bear, but difficult times will not go away. The Lord will sustain you! Stand firm in the day of trouble. Stand firm in the face of persecution, of those who can kill the body but cannot touch the soul. Stand firm knowing this world is not your home and God has in store for you a form far more glorious than this failing shell you are dragging around. Stand firm in service to God until the day you are called home to him. Hear the word of the Lord in Isaiah 41:10: fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.

Christian, the Lord is able to strengthen you with power through his Holy Spirit in your inner man. Trust him.

There is another aspect to this strength we receive. In the first part of verse 17 Paul tells us, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. This goes along with the Spirit within us. In John 17:23 Jesus promises to be in his followers. He is present with us through the Spirit. When the Spirit is at work in us, Christ is at work in us.

Christian, the whole trinity is at work in your life. It is the Father who has authority to send us aid, to cause us to be strengthened. He strengthens us by giving us his Spirit and through the Spirit, Jesus. There is no disagreement within the trinity on whether or not humans should receive divine aid. We would be helpless if all of God were not at work in us. Thus Paul adds to his prayer in verse 19, asking that we may be filled with all the fullness of God. This fullness is possible because God is not divided in his work for us. The Father sends the Spirit, through the Spirit we have the Son. You are a temple of the Holy Spirit and because of the Spirit you have Jesus within you. How can you overcome the world? Because God is at work within you to strengthen and sustain. You will be victorious in the world because he is victorious in you.

But it all comes back to faith. Verse 17 says that Jesus dwells in our hearts through faith. This does not happen automatically for everyone but only for those who have faith in the Son of God. If you are a believer then you have this faith and you have this Father, Son, and Spirit. You may feel your faith assaulted. The devil loves to go after faith and we live in a world absolutely full of people trying to create doubt. But know that your faith is sustained by your Father. Paul does not plead with us to have more faith; he prays that the Father would strengthen our faith. Christian, here again is the source of your strength. It is not you. Faith does not come from your determination to believe, it comes as the Father strengthens it within us.

How should you respond to trouble in life? Not by stiffening your shoulders, tensing your muscles, and pushing through by your strength. You will surely fall. Endure trial on your knees, praying to the Father for strength. He is able, and he is willing. What looks like a position of weakness, of surrender, is the Christian position of strength. As we said earlier, I do not mean you must pray on your knees, but I do mean you must pray! As Paul prays for the believers, so you too pray. For yourself and for your brothers and sisters in Christ.

Pray to the Father Lord God, do not let me go! And do not let them go. I feel the coldness in my heart, I feel the battle pressing, I know my grip slipped long ago – I cannot make it! Then you will know it is the hand of Jesus that holds you. Peter could not walk on those stormy waves unless the Son enabled him, and when Peter fell into the seas it was the Son who grabbed him and pulled him back to security. Your only chance for safety is in the hands of your God. Rest in him. Seek him out in your prayers. Intercede for your brothers that Christ might hold them above the waves. We are all inches from drowning, or inches from the flames, kept safe only by the strong arm of our God. And he has promised to sustain us, to see us safely to the day of Christ Jesus our Lord. Trust in him and him alone.

Giving Time

Greetings to the saints of God! I write this in the midst of Vacation Bible School week as we continue to try to train up children in the way they should go. Our influence with these kids is limited: two hours a day for five days. But it is amazing how much can change in a short span of time. We pray that this week will make a lasting impression in the lives of those who pass through, participant and worker alike.

If God can change a life through a short event like VBS just think of what he does through the continuing relationships we have with those around us. God has blessed us with friends, neighbors, family members, even enemies! with whom we can share the love of Christ. We usually see or talk with these people for more than just a few hours a week. What witness comes from your life or your mouth? What does your behavior say about the God you serve? How do your words proclaim the glory of the Lord?

In Ephesians 5:15-17 Paul tells us, Look carefully then how you walk, not as unwise but as wise, making the best use of the time, because the days are evil. Therefore do not be foolish, but understand what the will of the Lord is. We live in evil days but someday those days will come to an end and the Lord Jesus will return as a conquering king. Are you making the best use of the time now available? God can use a week-long VBS, he can also use a lifetime. Give it to him.

July 22, 2009

Our trip to Orlando in October is on go. There are 20 planning to make this trip for the Sensational Senior Adult Celebration. This will be our third year to attend this celebration.

The trip to Williamsburg will not take place – we did not get enough interest to make the trip.

Thank you so much for the personal items for the Seafarer’s Ministry. We had a nice amount to present to them. Also, the items for the Vacation Bible School that you gave were appreciated.

I appreciate the seniors’ involvement in all we do here at Immanuel.

Stay involved!

Martha

July 29th Menu

The following is our menu for the Wednesday evening fellowship meal on July 29th.

Pork chops
Mashed potatoes
Black-eye peas
Turnips
Cornbread
Dessert

The meal will begin at 5:30 in the fellowship hall. Those unable to attend can still come at 6:15 for the prayer time and Bible study.

Cost for meals is $5.00 per adult or $3.00 per child.

Covenant: The Man After God’s Own Heart

2 Samuel 1-10

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This sermon was preached by Rev. Chris Roberts during the evening service on July 19, 2009.

The following resources are also available from this service:
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 Covenant: The Man After God's Own Heart [33:25m]: Play Now | Download

Spiritual Check-up

1 Corinthians 11:28

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This sermon was preached by Rev. Chris Roberts during the morning service on Sunday, July 19, 2009.

 
 Spiritual Check-up [20:25m]: Play Now | Download

This morning we will be coming to the Lord’s table and remember Jesus’ death through the Lord’s supper. In 1 Corinthians 11 Paul provides instructions on how to do the Lord’s Supper. The instructions are not explicit, he does not give every detail, but he is firm on a few things.

One of these things is found in 1 Corinthians 11:28-29 when Paul instructs believers, Let a person examine himself, then, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup. For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment on himself. Paul then goes on to say that some have died because they participated in an unworthy manner. Why such a stark warning? To answer, let’s take a quick look at what the Lord’s Supper is.

This is one of two practices of the church known as ordinances, the other being baptism. Jesus instructed his followers to carry out these practices, baptism following salvation and the Lord’s Supper as a regular part of worship.

For Christians, the Lord’s Supper takes the place of the Jewish Passover feast. At Passover the angel of death passed over the Israelites, sparing them since a passover lamb had been slain in their place. Jesus has become our passover lamb, the one who has taken our punishment so that the judgment of God passes over us.

At the table the body and blood of Jesus are signified. The bread represents the body of Jesus, broken on the cross. The juice stands for his blood, shed for our sins. The elements do not turn into the body and blood of Jesus but point us to Jesus and his work for us.

The Lord’s Supper is a reminder that Jesus died for our sins. This time is a time to rejoice in the mercies of God. You do not deserve his mercy, he gives it freely. This time is a time to repent of our sin which made his death necessary. It calls for sorrow that my sin nailed him to the tree. I am responsible for the death of Jesus. This time calls for self-examination, for taking sin seriously and rooting it out.

Self-examination is necessary because the person who comes to the table while living in sin makes a mockery of the sacrifice of Jesus. All of us are sinners but there is a difference in the sin that is fought and the sin that is accepted or even celebrated. Those living in open rebellion against God are not welcome to the table of the Lord. To that end, this table is for Christians, the people of God. And it is specifically for Christians striving for holiness, fighting sin, submitting to the Spirit, seeking to honor God in all of life. Christian, there will always be sin in your life, but fight the sin. Turn from a life that delights in sin to a life that delights in God.

How does self-examination take place? How do you do a spiritual check-up? Let me briefly suggest five things.

First, be in Scripture. The first sign of spiritual sickness is a lack of time in God’s Word. If you are not regularly in Scripture, you are not healthy. You may not be living in open sin but you are diminishing your ability to recognize and resist sin. How much time do you spend in God’s Word? Is your heart fed mostly with the things of God or with the things of the world?

Second, be faithful in prayer. Scripture tells us to be people of prayer but we neglect this gift. And it is a gift. You have the opportunity to speak with the Creator and yet you often shrug it off, neglect it, and move on to other things. Pour out your heart to God. Seek out his will. Make intercession for your brothers. Do this through prayer and you will give less opportunity for the Devil to sway your mind.

Third, find the sin in your life. I love David’s prayer in Psalm 139:23-24: Search me, O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts! And see if there be any grievous way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting! David is not saying, “God, look at me and see how clean I am!” He is saying, “God, look at me and tell me what you see! Show me my sins! Reveal to me the things I either cannot see or refuse to see. Do not let sin go overlooked in my life.” We too often have sins we tolerate or justify. Do not tolerate sin in your life. Do not let it stay hidden. Seek it out.

Fourth, do more than just seek out sin. Repent of it. Many people do not understand repentance. It is more than just praying “God, I am sorry for my sins, please forgive me.” Repentance is a change of heart that results in a change of life. It is holy horror at your own sin, seeing how terrible sin is in the eyes of God. It is praying for forgiveness and it is turning from that sin. You do not repent of adultery by praying for forgiveness and returning to sin once more. You repent by seeking forgiveness, reconciliation, and by avoiding the sin! We have not repented of what we hold on to.

Fifth, be active in obedience. There are things God has called us to do: tell others the gospel; feed the hungry; clothe the needy; support the church; help fellow believers grow in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ; be godly husbands and wives and fathers and children; the list goes on. You are not spiritually healthy if you are not obeying God. Don’t wait for someone to invite you to be obedient, take the initiative. Seek out opportunities to fulfill God’s commands.

Be faithful in Scripture, pray without ceasing, seek out your sin, repent of sin, and be active in obedience. None of these things happen without the work of God in your life. Recognize that as you grow, as you are delivered from this sin or that temptation, this does not happen through your own strength but is God at work within you.

So how did your spiritual check-up go? We all have much work to do. But trust in God – he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion in the day of Christ.

July 22nd Menu

The following is our menu for the Wednesday evening fellowship meal on July 1st.

Pepper steak
Rice
Green beans
Corn
Roll
Dessert

The meal will begin at 5:30 in the fellowship hall. Those unable to attend can still come at 6:15 for the prayer time and Bible study.

Cost for meals is $5.00 per adult or $3.00 per child.

Missionary Mindset

What does it mean to have a missionary mindset? Is that what you have when you are committed to go to a foreign land like Africa or South America or California? Is it perhaps a vague notion of wanting to communicate the gospel to people?

A missionary mindset is found in people who deeply love God and delight in him and want to share that delight with others. When your desire is to help people move from the darkness into the light, showing them the hope and satisfaction and joy and mercy and forgiveness and love of Jesus Christ, you are taking on the mind of a missionary.

Too often we compartmentalize our lives. “Well, now it’s time for me to think like a cook, or like a driver, or like a parent or grandparent, or like a Christian.” For the Christian, all of life should be about service to God. That means having an ongoing commitment to do and desire what God calls us to do and desire, including a desire to spread the gospel to all people.

You do not have to go away to exercise a missionary mindset. Most missions is best done at home as faithful believers share the gospel among their friends, family, neighbors, co-workers, and strangers on the street. Ask God to grow in you a missionary mindset wherever you go, whatever you do.

Watchmen on the Wall

The Florida Baptist Convention has set aside the month of August for prayer. Every association has been asked to assign every day of the month to different churches, asking the churches to have people praying every hour of their day. We have chosen August 5th for our day.

Please consider participating. With your help we will have someone praying for our churches and for revival every hour of every day throughout the month of August. The sign-up sheet will be on the bulletin board in the fellowship hall. You do not have to come to the church to pray, though you are welcome to do so if the church is open. More information will be provided as we get closer to our date.

As Christians prayer is one of our great responsibilities and great privileges. We feel significant when we have the ear of leaders and politicians for five minutes and yet we somehow downplay the vastly superior privilege of having the ear of the one who created everything.

Whether or not you participate in this day of prayer, be a person of prayer. Seek the Lord daily. Lift up your voice to him. Intercede for your brothers and sisters in Christ. Pray for me and others who minister in the church. Let’s be a people with holy hands lifted in prayer to the Lord our God.

Covenant: The Suffering of Job

Job

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This sermon was preached by Rev. Chris Roberts during the evening service on July 12, 2009.

The following resources are also available from this service:
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 Covenant: The Suffering of Job [38:15m]: Play Now | Download

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