Our Trials Are Our Glory

John 17:24 contains a fascinating concept.  Jesus prayed, “‘Father, I want those you have given me to be with me where I am, and to see my glory, the glory you have given me because you loved me before the creation of the world.”  Before the creation of the world it was decided in heaven’s councils that Jesus would go to the cross to redeem mankind.  The fall was not a secret to the Godhead but would be an enormous disappointment to them.  When Jesus breathed into Adam the breath of life Jesus knew what He would have to do to enable Adam’s immortality.  The cross would be horrendous. The cross would be torture beyond physical pain.  It would necessitate Jesus’ separating from the Father so He could pay the price for sin.  Jesus’ cross was His glory.

How often it is that we complain when given a difficult assignment.  When given a great task that will require sacrifice and suffering the glory that follows is enormous.  When a soldier is greatly honored with a Congressional Medal of Honor it is because he or she has gone way beyond what a normal man or woman would do.  For the rest of his/her life the glory of their pain and sacrifice will be remembered.

Let us never complain about trials and sacrifices.  Our successful accomplishment of them and overcoming will forever be our glory.  It is no wonder Jesus said in the Sermon on the Mount, “Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me.  Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven.”

Written by Roger Bothwell on March 7, 2016

rogerbothwell.org

 

 

Heaven Is A Grudge Free Zone

I sat down this afternoon with my high school senior year annual.  It has been decades since I cracked it open.  I wasn’t surprised that I could not remember the names and faces of those in the classes below seniors.  We were so important as seniors the other peons didn’t exist.  But what amazed me was I could not remember those in my class, some of which I think were in my class all four years.  By each picture there is a written message.  The messages basically all say the same thing. “Don’t forget the good times we had.”   I did.

There was one message that really puzzles me.  It starts off with “Dearest Roger, It has been swell knowing you this year. Really. Lovingly Yours, Gayle” It is beside a picture of some girl named, Linda.  Wow.  Who’s Gayle?  Who’s Linda?  Are they the same person?  If anything happened surely I would remember!!  I’m not that senile.

If this memory loss could happen after fifty years what will it be like to live forever?  So I am going to cover myself now by asking you to forgive me if we meet once every millennium or so and I have no recollection of you.  I’m sorry.  It must be in my DNA.

I get the idea that forgetting is a big thing in heaven.  “For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more.”  Hebrews 8:12.   God sets the standard and if we are to be like Him we also will forget each other’s sins.  There will be no grudges in heaven.  Heaven is a Grudge Free Zone.   And most importantly we will forgive ourselves.  Often that is much more difficult than forgiving someone else.

Written by Roger Bothwell on March 4, 2016

rogerbothwell.org

 

Effect Without Cause

We had some serious wind this morning.  The roar of it moving through the maples and pines totally drowned out all other sounds.  But of greater interest was our resident Sharp-shinned Hawk.  He was hovering above me face into the wind and without a steady beat of his wings held his place without being blown away.   As an old pilot who has had his share of being blown all over the sky I was amazed.  How could he do it?  By what configuration of his wings could he maintain position in that fierce wind?

My mind immediately went to Job 39, a magnificent poetic rebuke by God, where God asks Job question after question about nature.  In verse 26 God asked, “Does the hawk take flight by your wisdom and spread its wings towards the south?”  My hawk was heading west but the question was the same.  My wisdom was confounded.

There is so much that confounds me.  The list grows longer with the passing of years.  For so many things I have run out of logic and have surrendered to the truth that there is an eternity of things yet to learn.  Stephen Hawking, physicist and mathematician, has, after a lifetime of inquiry, stated there is effect without cause.  There was no beginning to the universe.  There was no first cause.  It just is.   I am fascinated because it seems to my feeble intellect that he finally has said what Christians have been saying about the creator God.  He had no beginning.  He just is.  And because He is, He intelligently designed us.

We have been accused of not being scientists but metaphysicians.  Now both Hawking and we are positioned by some kind of faith.  We are both in the same camp – ALMOST.

Written by Roger Bothwell on March 3, 2016

rogerbothwell.org

 

 

Never Sever

The card reader on my computer stopped working.  I tried everything my non nerd brain could think to try.  I rebooted.  I restored my system to an earlier date.  I ran an antiviral program.  I turned it off and waited two minutes before turning it on again. All of this was to no avail.  Alas, I pulled all the plugs and wires and took it to a computer repair shop. I think you know what happened.  I thought it only happened with cars.  When the tech plugged in the computer the card reader worked. The only conclusion we could come up with was that by completely severing all power we allowed for a total reset.

So I thought maybe this is a good illustration of our relationship with Christ.  When it stops working we should completely disengage from God and then come back for a totally new start.  Then I realized this is a horrible illustration.  This is nuts.  It is true; rededication of our lives to Christ is a good idea.  But, we should NEVER sever our relationship so we then can renew it and thus enhance it.  That doesn’t make good sense.  It is akin to Romans 6 where people suggested they should sin more so grace could abound.

It’s like saying I should stop loving my wife for a week so when I start again it will be a stronger and better love.  We just can’t turn love on and off as if it were a light bulb.  Love is an integral part of our being.  With love we establish and maintain relationships.  It is love that brought us into this world and love that transports us to the next.

Written by Roger Bothwell on March 2, 2016

rogerbothwell,org

Stand Back and Be Amazed

According to Hebrew tradition there are 613 laws in the Torah.  Three hundred and sixty-five, one for each day of the year, are negative (the don’ts) and 248 are positive (the dos).   This does not mean principles were not understood.  In  Mark 12 after Jesus had responded to a teacher of the law the man said, “Well said, teacher. You are right in saying that God is one and there is no other but him. To love him with all your heart, with all your understanding and with all your strength, and to love your neighbor as yourself is more important than all burnt offerings and sacrifices.”  But it is indicative that obedience to law is paramount in the Jewish experience.

Thus the rich young ruler’s question to Jesus, “What must I do to be saved?”  Jesus’ response was very traditional.  He told the young man to keep the commandments.  The young man claimed to have done so all his life but he was still spiritually hungry.  After the young man departed Jesus’ comments about how difficult it is for a rich man to enter the kingdom led up to this exchange. “The disciples were even more amazed, and said to each other, ‘Who then can be saved?’ Jesus looked at them and said, ‘With man this is impossible, but not with God; all things are possible with God.’”

There it is from Jesus’ own mouth. If it were up to us we would never make it.  It is impossible. But He will not leave us despondent and heartbroken.  He adds that all things are possible with God.  Don’t fail to notice the word “all.”   That encompasses the very worst of us.  Can God save Hitler?  He can and would if Hitler had asked.  Stand back and be amazed!

Written by Roger Bothwell on March 1, 2016

rogerbothwell.org

 

Paul – Fashion Designer

It must be time for the Oscars because I hear people asking, “Who are you wearing.”  My favorite response was, “J. C. Penney.”  It is a great question to ask any time of the year.  And considering what Paul wrote in Galatians the answer is Christ.  Galatians 3:26 -7 says, “So in Christ Jesus you are all children of God through faith, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.”

This is a favorite theme of Paul.  He must have had a secret desire to be a fashion designer because in Romans 13:14 he wrote, “Rather, clothe yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ.”   And in Ephesians 6 he has a whole wardrobe for us.  He starts with a breastplate of righteousness.  He tells us what shoes to wear and ends with a helmet.  Now that’s not something you would see on the red carpet in Hollywood.  Or maybe so.

Paul wants us to be ready for anything Satan hurls at us and when we are wearing Christ we are ready.  In Romans 8 we read that nothing can harm us.  No powers of darkness nor angels of darkness are a match for us because we are more than conquerors in Christ.  Paul saw some really rough times.   He was stoned, shipwrecked and bitten by a snake.  Not to worry.  He had Christ.

Jesus told us not to fear those that can harm our bodies.  Our bodies, unlike our heavenly identity, are temporary clothes.  When we are worn out, wrinkled and maybe torn apart by God’s enemies we will toss off this corruptible and put on a whole new body and wardrobe that will never tear or even fade. See I Corinthians 15.

Written by Roger Bothwell on February 29, 2016

rogerbothwell.org

Blank, Blanker, Blankest

I’m sitting here staring at a blank computer screen unable to think of anything to write about.  My face is illuminated by light from the screen.  There is just nothing there.  Wait a moment.  I have an idea.  According to the Book of Revelation in heaven there is a record of my sins.  But, according to the promise in John 5 about my not being judged because of Jesus’ mercy, my sins are blotted out. Blots are messy and if John understood the delete key on a computer I’m sure he would have said deleted instead of blotted.  Therefore, I am going to assume my page is like my blank computer screen reflecting only light.  I like that idea.  Considering the challenge of filling a page with text can be quite daunting, I have never been happy with a blank screen, but now I am.  The blanker the better.  Hmm.  If something is blank can it be blanker or blankest?  The thing is blank is sufficient. I would be being piggy if I wanted blanker.

One of my earliest memory verses as a child was I John 1:9.  “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.”  One thing is for sure I am a good confessor.  I’m the best.  As soon as I realize something is wrong I confess.  It isn’t because I think I will be thrown out if I don’t get right to it.  No.  A good parent doesn’t throw a child out of the family every time they do something wrong.  No, I am quick to confess because I don’t want to cause Jesus any grief because of me.  Love makes us want to please our lover.

Written by Roger Bothwell on February 26, 2016

rogerbothwell.org

 

Cursed?

It’s not every day one is cursed by a gypsy.  It wasn’t me.  It was my wife.  I was sitting in a park in St. Petersburg, Russia.  It was a glorious day and my wife had drifted off a way to take a picture when a 50ish woman, garishly dressed with bangles and beads, approached me and took my hand.  Turning it palm side up she began slowly chanting something in Russian.  About this time my wife returned and intervened before I was relieved of my wallet.  As my wife shooed the sorceress away she was rewarded with a spewing of words and arms waving signs of incantations finished off with a spit on the ground.  We didn’t need to know Russian to imagine what was just said.  For the next week I carefully watched my wife scanning her for any disturbing signs of deterioration or incoherency.  The palm reader would be highly disappointed as my wife just keeps getting better and better with each passing day.

Don’t you just love Romans 8?  “If God is for us, who can be against us?  He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things? Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? . . . For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers,  neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

That is just about the best thing anyone has ever written.  Praise God.

Written by Roger Bothwell on February 25, 2016

rogerbothwell.org

 

Love Is the Basics

One of my graduate students has a 16-year-old student who says he is anxious to start a family.  He is from a home with nine children whose parents do not work.  He wants a child so the government will send him a monthly check just like they do for his mom and dad. My grad student is motivated to motivate this young man to catch a glimpse of what life can be as opposed to what life is.

As a teacher I have come to realize less than half my job is to dispense information.  Over 50% is to motivate.  Unless a student sees the value in something and wants it, the classroom experience is wasted.  In one of my undergrad classes this semester I have a student who just doesn’t care and until I can motivate him to care he is wasting his money.  (It probably isn’t his money,  but that of someone who does care.)

It is the same with preaching.  So often preachers have used fear as their chief motivator.  Some preachers are so hot one can smell the brimstone.  But it doesn’t have to be that way.  There is nothing stronger than love.  God is love.   The Good News is all about how much we are loved.  Good preaching isn’t making people feel like they have to change their lives.  Good preaching is making people want to change their lives.  I once had a church member, a physician, say to me, “When are you going to stop preaching all this love stuff and get down to the basics?”  After I caught my breath from shock I said, “Love is the basics.”

I don’t want to scare the hell out of people.  I want to love them into Jesus’ arms.

Written by Roger Bothwell on February 24, 2016

rogerbothwell.org

 

God – A Keeper of Secrets

Do you have some deep dark secret?  Do you live in fear that someone will find out and tell?  Are you worried that this blight on your character will become common knowledge and you will be socially shamed? I wish I could assure you that will never happen. But what I can assure you is that God will never be the gossip or the tattletale.  In Romans 10:11 Paul quotes Isaiah in telling us, “Everyone who trusts in Him will never be put to shame.”  Phew.  Isn’t it great to be a Christian?  God is a keeper of secrets. As a matter of fact He keeps them so well He even chooses to never think of them.  They are blotted out.

If you haven’t read Romans 10 recently I would encourage you to try it today.  There are some other gems waiting for you.  Verse 13 is grand.  “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”   Paul quoted that from the Book of Joel.  Joel is not a book we often reference when speaking about forgiveness and salvation.  We might even be tempted to think Paul used it out of context.  However, once Paul has referenced it, we are certainly able to do so.

Romans 10 is part of Paul’s concern about his people and their continued rejection of Jesus as the Messiah.  He goes on in chapter 11 to tell us God, in His power and wisdom, will find a way to save them and we might not understand how He does it but He is God and His love is unbounded.  His judgments are unsearchable and we do not want to be like the prodigal son’s brother and resent the Father’s love.  We also are partakers of mercy.

Written by Roger Bothwell on February 23, 2016

rogerbothwell.org