significance of "bubba-licious" ... well, my nieces and nephews affectionately call me "bubba" (real flattering, eh?)... and "licious"... well, i just am, what can i say?!

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Bring the rain

So I pray…
Bring me joy, bring me peace, bring the chance to be free
Bring me anything that brings you glory
And I know there’ll be days when this life brings me pain
But if that’s what is takes to praise you
Jesus, bring the rain

This song by MercyMe has become one of my favorite songs. I played it over and over and over… throughout the day today. I love the phrase: BRING ME ANYTHING THAT BRINGS YOU GLORY. Oh, may that be my heart’s prayer! In everything that comes my way, may it draw me closer to God, and may my response bring Him glory.

May I forever sing…
Holy, holy, holy
Is the Lord God almighty!

Thursday, October 18, 2007

The Truth Will Set You Free?

I receive "A Slice of Infinity" each day, and thought I would share today's entry on the blog. Enjoy!

One of my professors divided the class into groups of five and asked us to decide which of the following three individuals had the most freedom:

(1) A person who is not able to sin,
(2) A person who is both able to sin and able not to sin, and
(3) A person who is not able not to sin.

Less than five minutes into the discussion, my group had concluded that the person who was both able to sin and able not to sin (person #2) had the most freedom. We correctly eliminated option #3 since a person who cannot help but sin is really in bondage. But the unanimity of the decision and the ease with which it was arrived at caused us to suspect that something was wrong. Why would we be asked to "discuss" such a "simple" question in a graduate seminar?

We had made two serious errors in our deliberation: we did not take into account the biblical meaning of "freedom" and we did not fully appreciate the nature of sin. Like most people, we thought freedom was the ability to do what one wanted to do--whenever, however, and wherever one chose to do it. Consequently, we reasoned that the person who had the most choices automatically had the most freedom. When I wondered out loud whether we really believed that a person who could sin had more freedom than God, who cannot sin, we found out why we needed some time to discuss the question.

Biblically speaking, freedom is the ability to function the way God designed us to function. This is the reason why freedom and truth are so intertwined; we need to know what our purpose and design are before we can exercise the freedom to fulfill our mission on earth. That is also true of things we ourselves make. A meticulously manufactured Ferrari which, I've been told, is a marvel on the road, is completely useless in the ocean. A hammer functions at its best when it is pounding nails, and a multi-million dollar piece of equipment made for space travel is useless to us unless we know its purpose. Similarly, we function at our best when our lives measure up to our Designer's specifications. It is true that God's purposes can be fulfilled even through people who reject Him, but true freedom is found only in Him.

Misunderstanding the kind of freedom Christ offers leads to a distorted view of the nature of sin. Some find it hard to give a good reason why sin is prohibited by God. Don't God's prohibitions limit our freedom? Wouldn't some acts, at least, be harmlessly enjoyable if God, for some curious reason, did not brand them "sin"? The answer to both questions is no, and the reason is that sin is a serious defect in humanity, not a virtue. It will eventually turn those who relentlessly cling to it into grotesque distortions of God's original intent for them. Anything that impedes our progress towards our true identity and calling diverts us from our journey to freedom, even when no one else finds out.

That is why it is not quite true to tell people that knowing the truth will set them free. That phrase is part of a very instructive discipleship statement in John 8:31-32 which reads, "To the Jews who had believed him, Jesus said, 'If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.'" Did you notice the conditional nature of the freedom proclaimed here? Only by holding to the teaching of Christ in the context of purposeful discipleship can true freedom be found. James 1:25 tells us that practicing God's perfect law gives us freedom. Without a clear understanding of our call to freedom in Christ, our thirst for righteousness and passion for the lost will be seriously hindered, for we will secretly think that the requirements of righteousness are really deprivations.

No, I am not advocating works salvation. We are saved by grace through faith alone, but in the process of growth as believers, the light of the gospel must gradually shine on those areas of our lives that hold us back from fulfilling our true calling. When the gospel of Christ begins to chip away at those holdups, we learn what it means to be truly free and why it is prudent to hate sin. John Witherspoon was right. In his sermon on the first Thanksgiving Day called after the war for independence in the US, he declared, "A republic once equally poised must either preserve its virtue or lose its liberty."(1) Whether for an individual or a sovereign nation, truth and virtue are the rails upon which the wheels of freedom roll.

J.M. Njoroge is associate apologist at Ravi Zacharias International Ministries in Atlanta, Georgia.

(1) Quoted by Francis Schaeffer, A Christian Manifesto, 33.

Copyright (c) 2007 Ravi Zacharias International Ministries (RZIM)"A Slice of Infinity" is aimed at reaching into the culture with words of challenge, words of truth, and words of hope. If you know of others who would enjoy receiving "A Slice of Infinity" in their email box each day, tell them they can sign up on our website at http://www.rzim.org/slice/slice.php. If they do not have access to the World Wide Web, please call 1-877-88SLICE (1-877-887-5423).

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

The LORD sets prisoners free

My church just finished its week-long missions conference and once again, we had an excellent group of missionaries who came to share with us. Home runs all around! One of the missionaries, Joan Ewan, shared an amazing story of the transforming grace of Jesus Christ! This is what Christ did for all of us-- we were all prisoners at one time, and through the work on the cross, He has set us free! Are you free?

One Stupid Decision

"I deserved punishment for what I did," says Laura. "I felt too guilty to be forgiven. In a moment, one stupid decision cost me my life, my dreams, and my future."

Laura had swallowed seventy plastic capsules filled with pure cocaine in order to smuggle them from Ecuador to Poland. But before she boarded a plane, Laura became violently ill and gratefully went with police to a hospital. For nearly a week, residue of the dangerous narcotic lingered in her system.

As a child in Poland, Laura was taught solid moral principles based on the Catholic faith. While a university student, she traveled to Quito, Ecuador, to study Spanish at the suggestion of her boyfriend. It was he who convinced Laura to smuggle the drugs. "I was ready to break the law and transport drugs, even inside my stomach, for him."

It came as a great shock to her family that Laura was guilty of such a crime. She grieved for them and for her own loss when she received an eight-year sentence at El Inca Women's Prison, where Alliance missionary Joan Ewan has a ministry to inmates.

"Life for inmates at El Inca is hard," says Joan. "They are not afforded any conveniences and 'earn' income to survive through the sale of drugs or personal belongings." There are 630 women and 275 children in the 600- capacity facility.

Laura began attending Joan's Bible studies. "The Holy Spirit was working in me," Laura says, "and gradually, I understood that I am forgiven and God has a purpose for me. Suddenly, [learning about Him] became special and exciting."

Prison administrators recognized the positive example that Laura was setting and recommended parole. Because of Joan's appeal on her behalf, Laura was approved for parole Monday through Thursday with adult supervision but must return to jail Friday through Sunday.

Laura has become a part of the Ewan family and cherishes her time with Joan and and her husband, Don. Laura is a teacher's aide at Alliance Academy International, working to get her degree in biblical education. She also is taking a course in tourism administration but still has three years of her sentence to complete.

In spite of the obstacles of prison life, Laura says she's content. "I realize that happiness is what we're all looking for," she says. "Some look for it in material possessions, some in drugs or the perfect guy. Then I met Jesus, the only perfect Man, who gave me much more than happiness. He gave me joy and peace."

"The LORD sets prisoners free" (Psalm 146:7b).

Laura is just one of many prisoners at El Inca Women's Prison in Ecuador that have given their hearts to Christ and have experienced tremendous change in their lives as a result. Let's join together and pray that they will be free from the bondage and the lies that satan is trying to connive them of, and may they experience freedom in Christ. Living the call together!