Category Archives: Christian Living

Blogs in this topic are designed focus on living a life that’s honoring to God.

Don’t put your faith in a box

In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths (Proverbs 3:6).

Its amazing what we learn about ourselves when we finally begin to gain true perspective in our lives.  I didn’t grow up in a Christian home.  While I was saved while I was 19 years old and while at college, the church I attended did not offer much in discipleship.  Instead of seeking a church that did, I was content to approach my new-found faith based on what I thought it meant to be a Christian.

Believing what the world taught about faith and Christianity, I strove to keep my “church life” separate from my “school life” and “work life.”  Without knowing it I had done the very thing that Jesus warns against: No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon (Matthew 6:24).

I know that one of the reasons that my walk with God has not always been where it should be is because I did believe that as a member of modern society, I had to keep my beliefs separate from work, school, and secular pursuits.  Even as recent as a couple of years ago, I struggled with my Christian identity and faith while attending graduate school to work on a Ph.D. in U.S. History.  At one point, I even had one of my instructors tell me that it would be extremely difficult for me to ever teach at a liberal arts college if I insisted on displaying my Christianity.

When the apostle Paul was on his various missionary journeys across the Mediterranean world, he would often follow up with churches that he had help start.  These early churches did not have the benefit of having both Old and New Testaments to gain reassurance and instruction.  They faced tremendous pressure to conform to the world around them  – to worship pagan statues, to participate in state sanctioned appropriate activities and festivals to honor pagan gods.  Paul’s advice to them was to be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God (Romans 12:2).

The reason that so many Christians, myself included, have such a hard time in our walk with Christ is that we have been conformed to this world.  We have been taught to regard our faith as something we do on Sunday and at the home.  What Jesus calls us to do is far more radical – our faith should become the center of our life, not just some small and isolated component.  We adopted the world’s view of Christianity under the misrepresentation that we should not judge but instead be compassionate and respectful of those who are different that we are.

What Jesus calls us to do is to allow our faith to shape who we are without any reservation.  When we claim to be a follower of Christ but do not allow our faith to shape our daily lives, we become what Paul warns about: those who call themselves Christians and they profess that they know God; but in works they deny him, being abominable, and disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate (Titus 1:16).  In other words, to live a Christ-centered life means that we must also acknowledge him in all that we do.  It should be evident from how we go from day to day, doing the things we normally do, that there has been a fundamental change in our lives.

Living a life that reflects God’s plan (part 5)

FOR I AM NOW READY TO BE OFFERED, AND THE TIME OF MY DEPARTURE IS AT HAND. I HAVE FOUGHT A GOOD FIGHT, I HAVE FINISHED MY COURSE, I HAVE KEPT THE FAITH: HENCEFORTH THERE IS LAID UP FOR ME A CROWN OF RIGHTEOUSNESS, WHICH THE LORD, THE RIGHTEOUS JUDGE, SHALL GIVE ME AT THAT DAY: AND NOT TO ME ONLY, BUT UNTO ALL THEM ALSO THAT LOVE HIS APPEARING (II TIMOTHY 4:6-8).

This series has focused on how as Christians, we need to structure our lives around the things that God consider’s important and in the order he has prescribed for us.  God has to be our first priority, as discussed in the second installment of the series.  In the third and fourth installments God’s plan for married and unmarried adults was discussed.  Finally, we come to the last of the series and focus on what God says is the third most important part of our lives:  the raising, nurturing, and caring of children.

From the very beginning in the Garden of Eden, God’s plan was for married men and women to bear children (Genesis 1:7-8).  A few years back, former First Lady Hillary Clinton made a statement that the world has latched hold of: it takes a village to raise a child.  While this may be true to some extent, the child must also be raised in a home with a mother and father.  In the societies of modern Europe and America, we have been led to believe that children who are raised in single parent homes or in “non-traditional” families fare as well in life as those raised in two-parent homes. This is not God’s plan and has never been from the beginning.

Since the 1890s, as American society began rejecting the traditional family model and adopting the new worldly philosophies of child rearing, we have seen a gradual decline in morality and work ethics. Solomon, the author of the book of Proverbs, wrote that parents are to train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it (Proverbs 22:6). Simply put, teach a child the important things in life – how to behave, how to worship God, how to pray, be helpful to others, to be courteous and kind, to do their best in all that they do, and how to have a wholesome and rewarding fun time, and when they reach adulthood, they’ll carry those things with them long after the parents have journeyed on.  How you raise your children not only will be your short term reward but will be the legacy you leave behind.

Raising children also means raising them in the knowledge of how to worship and serve God.  Growing up, I did not have the benefit of a family that regularly went to church, prayed, or read the Bible.  When I was was saved in Perkinston, Mississippi, the church had no discipleship program for new Christians.  For nearly the first fourteen years of my Christian walk, I didn’t grow much, didn’t know much, and remained what the apostle Peter suggested, a “newborn babe” with little substance or evidence of my faith.

In Genesis there is a great illustration of how important the passing of properly worshiping God is in the life of our children.  We all know the story of Cain and Abel – both sons of Adam and both were offering a sacrifice to God.  While it is true that both men were offering the sacrifice of their own free will, there is an important question that must be asked:  why did Cain feel that his offering should have been accepted by God?  Although the scriptures do not indicate any reason why he should think any differently, notice that Abel offered a sacrifice that was accepted (Genesis 4:1-5).  The Bible does not tell us who taught these two men how to honor and worship God, but it is clear that these men learned from someone – the only people that could have taught them would be Adam and Eve.

Shortly after the fall of man, God made clothing of animal skins for Adam and Eve (Genesis 3:21).  I have heard many preachers and theologians state that it was at this point, God taught Adam, the spiritual head of the home, how to properly worship and prepare a sacrifice for God.  This instruction was to be passed on to each male child so that each would be able to make offerings and sacrifices to God; however, Cain never had it reinforced or corrected when he offered something that was not according to God’s plan.  As a child, he would have been “protected” by his father’s accountability to God; as a man, he would have been accountable to God for his own actions.

An important part of being a parent is to remember what David wrote about the value of children: Lo, children are an heritage of the LORD: and the fruit of the womb is his reward (Psalms 127:3). We live in a society that has placed a low regard for the life of its children.  Some estimate that there may have been over 50 million aborted American babies since 1963; a few estimates actually claim its in the neighborhood of 73 million. Children are seen as pawns in the chess-like battle of divorce where parents seek to punish their partner instead of considering the needs of their children.  Our educational system treats them as a number that leads to higher funding instead of bright minds eager to learn what is offered.  It is imperative that we see children for what they are: God’s blessing and gift to marriage.  Even Eve understood this as recorded in the book of Genesis: she conceived, and bare Cain, and said, I have gotten a man from the LORD (Genesis 4:1).

Although this series focuses on family life, there is a divine order to the other things in life – after the family comes our job, our community/church service, and national service.  I think we have missed out on many blessings because we have put things in our personal lives and in society that simply are not worthy of the place or time we have assigned them.  Maybe, just maybe, we need to rethink what’s actually important.

Living a life that reflect’s God’s plan (Part 4)

For I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith: Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day: and not to me only, but unto all them also that love his appearing (II Timothy 4:6-8).

 In the previous installment of this series, the focus was primarily on how our spouses must be the second most important thing in our lives next to our personal relationship with God.  I briefly mentioned that for those that are not married, that according to the apostle Paul, their focus should be on the immediate family and the needs of the church.  It is important to include within this series a truth that’s not often preached upon but is much needed in the lives of those who are single, never married, divorced, or widowed:  God still desires your service!

Within our churches, adults that have never married and those who go through divorce, regardless of the reasons, often find themselves without opportunities for service.  As I went through my divorce, I found myself asked to step down from my role as song leader and Sunday school teacher.  I was even told that regardless of the reasons for the divorce, my Christian service was finished.  Nearly twenty years later, I have learned that it is simply not true.  Paul wrote that those who are married are not to seek to end the marriage and in the same sentence he ties it to the idea that those who are divorced are not to seek to be remarried (I Corinthians 7:27-28).  Instead of focusing on getting into another relationship, it is important to focus on our own healing and on serving God through the ministry of the church.

As did I, many Christians that go through a divorce find themselves feeling as if there are no places for us to serve within the local church.  Although divorce is the reason that one has become “loosed” it is not what should define that person.  It is the same with the single adult as well-intended and meaning friends (even members of the church) begin to wonder what is wrong with that person that has caused them to go unmarried; this also becomes an unneeded and unwarranted definition of single adulthood.

Our churches are full of adults that are single that have a sincere desire to serve God but with no opportunities to do so.  As I have found from experience and as sung by many in churches there’s a work for all to do.  Since adult singles do not have a spouse and may not have kids, their second priority is not their employment; their life’s second priority should be within their own families or to those within their local church.  Paul spends a great deal of time in his letters teaching the churches in Asia Minor that older men and women should teach the younger how to be good husbands and wives; he also teaches that the church needs to care for the aged, the widow, the poor, and the orphan.  Yes, a married person can do all those things, but as Paul wrote their focus should be on their spouse first (Titus 2:2-4; I Corinthians 7:34).

I stumbled upon this almost by accident when I went through my second divorce.  What I learned is that there are needs in every church that can be met and have the added benefit of being therapeutic for those that do them.  Take the time each week to mail a post card to the homebound of your church. Cook meals for those who are undergoing medical procedures, family difficulties, or homebound.  Visit church members that are in the hospital or take a shut in into town to the grocery store and maybe a quick bite to eat at a local restaurant. Volunteer to watch the children of a single parent; offer to babysit the children of a young couple for an afternoon.  The possibilities are endless, the need is great, and you will find yourself learning more about others and yourself than ever before.

Don’t forget the words of Jesus Christ on this very topic when he taught And the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as you have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me (Matthew 25:40).