The Bible begins in a garden and ends in a city, the city of God. And with that ending comes an altar call for the spiritually thirsty, for all who would believe in Jesus for salvation. Until he comes again, that invitation is still open!
Streets of gold; endless light; healing life; the presence of God -- those pictures of heaven speak of great hope ahead for those who know Christ. Jesus will come again, but the story is only beginning for those who serve him!
Genesis 1 will be revisited. The God who makes all things new will not only evict evil’s presence but recreate what was the domain of evil’s activity. The new heavens and earth will be the culmination of what our transformation in Christ is beginning now.
We could use a HALLELUJAH! That word is used four times in the Bible, all of them during Heaven’s celebration over Jesus’ triumphant second coming. In the midst of trouble, hurt, and confusion until then, let’s lift a HALLELUJAH even now!
There is no future event that is more important to a Christian than the second coming of Christ. He will bring justice, victory, and the kind of peace that the world has strived for but has been unable to achieve. Even so, come Lord Jesus!
The second coming of Jesus to the earth is known as the “blessed hope.” It is “blessed” because it will be the final triumph of Jesus’ saving grace in the world. And it is “hope” because that future event strengthens our perseverance today with an anticipation of a better day tomorrow.
Things in this world will get worse before they get better. Satan will wield his power through the world-wide domination of the AntiChrist. But the true Christ who came once to save us is coming again to finish up what he started!
Some of us have been going to too many funerals. The pandemic has been taking an unprecedented toll on human life, not to mention accidents, violence, and sickness in general. Where do we look? Can anything help us to grieve and find hope?
Sometimes it’s easy to forget how powerful our prayers are. We may get discouraged if we’ve prayed for someone and we didn’t see the answer that we had hoped for, but James encourages us that we have the power of the Holy Spirit and the power of prayer on our side. God’s word gives us permission to boldly believe for healing to come.
It’s hard to never say anything that you shouldn’t. So, we must be doubly careful about what we email, tweet, or post. Jesus said that what comes out of our mouths is actually an overflow of what’s in our hearts. So we must guard our hearts.
As we’ve seen already this week, James is all about a faith that is accompanied by actions! No matter who you are and where you’ve come from, you can’t escape the principle that true faith must be demonstrated by your actions… in today’s language: “Put your money where your mouth is!”
In today’s look at the book of James, we’re once again confronted by his very direct teaching on how we should live. James reminds us that we have an opportunity and obligation to show compassion without favoritism to those in need… if we truly do believe in loving our neighbor as ourself, then we should live like that!
The book of James is a book of wisdom from the New Testament. In it, James gives very direct instruction on how to live our Christian lives. You might summarize it by saying "If you really believe it, you'd live it!"
Power, love and self-discipline -- these are the big three that mark a courageous, Spirit-filled life. In spite of all the things that can ‘in-TIMID-ate’ us these days, God’s Spirit takes us in the opposite direction. No more being timid!
“Controversial speculations” that do not advance God’s work continue to be a danger for the church today. Conspiracy theories, arguments over masks and vaccines and politics, social media battles -- they detract from God’s work to reach a spiritually lost world.
A storm, a shipwreck, and a snake -- the last two chapters of the book of Acts are among the most adventurous found anywhere in the Bible. Yet at the center of it all was a man of God who stayed on mission and depended on God.