Sunday, June 16, 2019

Living Your Purpose


LIVING YOUR PURPOSE: Psalm 90:1-12
Introduction:  The Taj Mahal is one of the most beautiful and costly tombs ever built, and there is something fascinating about its beginnings. In 1629, when the favorite wife of Indian ruler Shah Jahan died, he ordered that a magnificent tomb be built as a memorial to her. The shah placed his wife’s casket in the middle of a parcel of land, and construction of the temple began around it. But several years into the venture, the Shah’s grief for his wife gave way to a passion for the project. One day while he was surveying the sight, he reportedly stumbled over a wooden box, and he had some workers throw it out.
            It was months before he realized that his wife’s casket had been destroyed. The original purpose for the memorial became lost in the details of construction. Similarly, those of us who are in our prime life if we are not careful, we too might be in the danger of losing the original purpose for which God has called us in the first place.
            Have you ever thought about what your purpose is in life? Some of us live our entire lives, trying to figure out the purpose of our existence. Some people fail, and some people succeed. And then there are those people who know their purpose, but still, they get diverted from it. Robert Bryne once observed, “The purpose of life is a life of purpose.” In order to get somewhere, you need to define your end goal. ... And the sooner you define it, the clearer everything else will become. A life without a purpose is a life without a destination.”
             This morning I seek to answer some fundamental questions regarding life. Where did I come from? Is there a meaning to life? If God has a purpose for my life, what is it? How can I live out the purpose God has for me? In the passage we read from Psalm 90:1-12, we will meet the man of God who wrestled through these most critical questions in life. His quest led him to the creator of the universe who only can solve all of life's most complicated problems.
            A bit of background of Psalm 90 would help us appreciate the Psalm even more. It was called a prayer of Moses, the man of God. It was written on the occasion of the sentence passed against Israel, in the wilderness of their unbelief, grumbling, and rebellion. It exposes God’s severe dealings of Israel’s sin we can read about it in Numbers 14.
            For the past several weeks, we have studied Psalm 91 in depth. I believe chapter 90 is the basis for all the promises and blessings that are there in chapter 91, hence our study on chapter 90 this morning. Verses 1-12 can be divided into three sections. The first section verses 1-4 deals with the eternity of God and his enduring dwelling among His people. The second section verses 5-9 deals with the brevity of life. The third section verses 10-12 deals with our response.
I. GOD’S ETERNITY (1-4)
            Vs. 1-2, “Lord, through all the generations you have been our home! 2 Before the mountains were born, before you gave birth to the earth and the world, from beginning to end, you are God.” The essence of our Christian faith is that our God Jehovah is the creator of the heavens and the earth, and He is the everlasting God. He is the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end and everything in between.  In other words, God is all-encompassing.
            Unfortunately, there are so many people in the world who try to run their lives as if they are the center of the universe. God does not appear on their radar. On the contrary, Moses saw the hand of God in everything that was created and sustained. God was, in the beginning, created everything in the world and had been maintaining it ever since by His power.
            You may wonder why did God create the world and make humans in the first place? Everything has been designed for one paramount purpose from which every other purpose flow, that is to bring glory to God. Isaiah 43:7, “Bring all who claim me as their God, for I, have made them for my glory. It was I who created them.” The world and we were made for His Glory.
            The apostle Paul echoes the same sentiment while writing about the supremacy of Christ to the Colossian believers. Colossians 1:15-16, “Christ is the visible image of the invisible God.
He existed before anything was created and is supreme over all creation, for through him, God created everything in the heavenly realms and on earth. He made the things we can see and the things we can’t see—such as thrones, kingdoms, rulers, and authorities in the unseen world. Everything was created through him and for him.”
            This scriptural truth debunks every popular belief of the atheists, evolutionists, hedonists, and nihilists. It is not what they say about how the world came into existence and what we are to make of the world and live our lives. It is apparent to me from these passages that it was Jesus who created everything, including us for His glory. Unfortunately, many do not realize this truth.
            But I am here to tell you that you and I are not an accident nor merely a result of our Mom and Dad’s passionate lovemaking. We are here because God has intended for us to be here, and he has a purpose and a plan which is to glorify Him through all that we are, and all that we do. It is up to us to recognize and seek to find ways how we are to glorify Him through our lives.        Whether you are young or old, man or single or married, working in a job or retired what an awesome truth to know that you are created by God to bring glory to His name. After recognizing God is eternal, Moses exclaims in his prayer how God deals with people who at times think they are gods in their own eyes.
II. GOD’S DEALINGS WITH MAN (3-6)
            Vs.3-6, “You turn people back to dust, saying, “Return to dust, you mortals!” For you, a thousand years are as a passing day, as brief as a few night hours. You sweep people away like dreams that disappear. They are like grass that springs up in the morning. In the morning it blooms and flourishes, but by evening it is dry and withered.”
            Think about this great control of God and insight over “time,” in his eyes; a thousand years are as a passing day, as brief as a few night hours. We will have a hard time remembering what happened a week or a day ago, whereas God commands the history of thousands of year because they are just like a few passing hours before him. If that is the case, can he not know what is going in your little world?  Think about His immense power over people.
            What did God do to all the so-called great men and women in the History of humanity? He said to them, “Return to dust, you mortals! No matter how powerful, influential, wealthy, famous we are, one day we will have to return to the dust from whence we came. Moses aptly described the fading glory of human beings.  Vs. 5-6: You sweep people away like dreams that disappear. They are like grass that springs up in the morning. In the morning it blooms and flourishes, but by evening it is dry and withered.” Given this, how are we to live our lives?
III. LIVING YOUR PURPOSE (Vs. 10-12)
            Vs., 10-12, “Seventy years are given to us! Some even live to eighty. But even the best years are filled with pain and trouble; soon they disappear, and we fly away.  Who can comprehend the power of your anger? Your wrath is as awesome as the fear you deserve. Teach us to realize the brevity of life so that we may grow in wisdom.”
            I believe these two verses are the most sobering verses in the Bible, which we need to pay attention to. They make us pause and have a reality check of our lives and perhaps do some adjustments to our plans. According to these verses, we don’t have eternity to live. The life span of human beings has been cut short. Before the universal flood recorded in Genesis, chapter seven, people used to live hundreds of years. For example, Methuselah, who lived for 969 years. (Gen 5:25) In Chapter 6: 3, God has reduced the average life span of human beings to a hundred and twenty years. In our passage, it was reduced further to seventy or eighty years.
            It doesn’t necessarily mean that people don’t get to live beyond 80 or 120, there are exceptions, for example, Noah after the flood when he died was 950 years. Jeanne Calment (1875–1997) of France, who died at the purported age of 122 years, 164 days. Within our congregation some members have parents touching close to a hundred years. Thought the longevity of man can be debatable, but the reality is that one day we all have to move on.
            Let’s say the average life span of human beings is up to seventy or eighty how well are we living our lives? Which means for me, I need to pause, think, refocus, adjust and live the remainder of my life say another 25 to 30 years on this earth more purposefully and intentionally. That was what perhaps Moses meant when he said, in Vs. 12, “Teach us to realize the brevity of life, so that we may grow in wisdom.” The clock is ticking; soon, we will fly away.
            The reality of aging, getting sick, retirement, and eventually dying seems somewhat wildly unreasonable to a lot of people, especially for young people. When I was twenty years old, I too thought that way, but now I am fifty-four, I understand, and hopefully, I became wiser.
            At what age we should start thinking about what our God-given purpose in life is? As a matter of fact, at any age you can ask these questions, what is my purpose in life? How well am I living out my God-given purpose? Since our life is so short, the sooner we ask these questions the better, so that we can minimize our regrets later in life.
            In Ecclesiastes, 12:1, “Don’t let the excitement of youth cause you to forget your Creator. Honor him in your youth before you grow old and say, “Life is not pleasant anymore.”  Lamentations 3: 27, “And it is good for people to submit at an early age to the yoke of his discipline. Do you know your purpose? How well are you living out your God-given purpose? We only have one life and it will soon be past, therefore let’s learn to live with purpose. My prayer is that the Lord will teach us to number our days so that we may grow in wisdom. Amen!





             



Sunday, June 9, 2019

Seven-Fold Blessings In Loving God


SEVEN-FOLD PROMISES IN LOVING GOD
Psalm 91:9-16
Introduction: Erwin W. Lutzer wrote, “Better to love God and die unknown than to love the world and be a hero. Better to be content with poverty than to die a slave to wealth; better to have taken some risks and lost than to have done nothing and succeeded at it; better to have lost some battles than to have retreated from the war; better to have failed when serving God than to have succeeded when serving the devil. What a tragedy to climb the ladder of success, only to discover that the ladder was leaning against the wrong wall.”
            In what are you better at today? On which wall is the ladder of your life placed? For the past few weeks, we have been learning about how God’s faithfulness works in the lives of those who trust Him. Today we will look at some of the promises that God makes to those who Love Him. Before we talk about those promises, here is how we can appropriate God’s promises.
I. IF: THE BIGGEST “LITTLE” WORD
            Vs. 9-12, 9 “If you make the Lord your refuge if you make the Most High your shelter, 10 no evil will conquer you; no plague will come near your home. 11 For he will order his angel to protect you wherever you go. 12 They will hold you up with their hands so you won’t even hurt your foot on a stone.” All the promises of protection, safety, and health are yea and amen, and they are for all God’s Children, but they are conditional.
            The promises found in these verses depend on a conditional clause called “If.” In the English language, “IF” is used to talk about the result or effect of something that may happen or be true. But in the Bible, the biggest little word “if” carries the power of life or death, a blessing, or a curse. When we are faced with storms in life, we can either choose to run to His shelter in faith, or we can passively live our lives the way the world does. The choice is ours, if we run to Him, we will be saved if not we will reap the consequences accordingly.
            In Vs. 11-12, “For he will order his angels to protect you wherever you go. They will hold you up with their hands so you won’t even hurt your foot on a stone.” This promise of angelic protection was misquoted by Satan in his temptation of the Messiah (Matt 4:6).
            This the idea of angels protecting people was prevalent in the OT. For example, in Psalm 103:20, “Praise the Lord, you angels, you mighty ones who carry out his plans, listening for each of his commands.” Corrie Ten Boom tells the story of an English man who was held in a German prison camp for a long time.  One day he read Psalm 91. “Father in heaven,” he prayed, “I see all these men dying around me, one after the other. Will I also have to die here?
            I am still young, and I very much want to work in Your kingdom here on earth.” He received this answer: “Rely on what you have just read and go home! Trusting in the Lord, he got up and walked into the corridor toward the gate. A guard called out, “Prisoner, where are you going? “I am under the protection of the “Most High,” he replied. The guard came to attention and let him pass, for Adolf Hitler was known as “the most high.”
            He came to the gate, where a group of guards stood. They commanded him to stop and asked him where he was going. “I am under the protection of the Most High.” All the guards stood at attention as he walked out the gate. He made his way through the German countryside and eventually reached England, where he told how he had made his escape. He was the only one to come out of the prison alive. If we make God our refuge, we too will be protected.
II. SEVEN-FOLD PROMISES IN LOVING GOD (Vs. 14-16)
            Vs. 14-16, “Because he has loved Me, therefore I will deliver him; I will set him securely on high because he has known My name. 15 “He will call upon Me, and I will answer him; I will be with him in trouble; I will rescue him and honor him. 16 “With a long life I will satisfy him and let him see My salvation.” (NASB).
            Those of us who have been in the church for a while have heard these words, “Loving God” many times.  We may need to pause and ask ourselves, what does it mean – to love God?  What does love for God look like – feel like – how does it show itself? How did the original recipients understand loving God? In our modern contemporary world, the word love lost its essence. For example; we say we love God and chocolate in the same manner.
            However, for the OT people, the Hebrew word chashaq, which is translated as “love” has a much deeper meaning.  It meant: To be attached to, to love, to have pleasure, to delight in. It has a sense of joining together (intimacy) adhering, cleaving. This kind of love is already bound to its object. In the OT, it occurs twelve times. It can be used to describe God’s feelings for man or a man’s devotion towards God. It is a love which will not let go easily.
            With that understanding, I will paraphrase verse 14, “Because you have loved me…” In other words, “Because you know my name, delight in me, take pleasure in me, cleave to me, are attached to me, will never let go of me. Therefore, I will deliver you and keep you safe.”
            God himself is the speaker in this section (14-16), and he describes the blessings he gives to those who know him and love Him. Again, the word love here means, “a deep longing to God,” or “clinging to God.” If we were, to be honest with ourselves, we might not be loving Him the way he expects us to love Him. I say this not to make us feel guilty because I don’t want anyone of us to miss out on the abundant promises that will be ours when we love Him.
1. GOD IS MY DELIVERER: “Because he has loved Me, therefore I will deliver him.”
            Deliverance is the first of the seven promises of loving God from this passage. Let’s make it personal. We say because I love you, Lord, I thank you for your promise of deliverance to me. At the beginning of Psalm 91, we learned that God wants to deliver us from every evil known to humankind. His protection will go with His people wherever they go.
            As a young missionary in India, traveling to unknown places in foreign countries, I had experienced God’s deliverance over and over again.  His protection has not yet stopped; he is there still to protect me. God’s deliverance for those who love Him is all-encompassing. It happens within(internal), and without (external); in fact, it surrounds us. Psalm 32: 7, “For you are my hiding place; you protect me from trouble. You surround me with songs of victory.” 
2. I AM SEATED ON HIGH,I will set him securely on high because he has known My name.”
            To be set securely on high is the second promise to those who love the lord and know him by His name. In Ephesians 2:6, we read, “For he raised us from the dead along with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms because we are united with Christ Jesus.”
             It is interesting to note that God pulls us up to where He is! When we are drowning by insurmountable problems, let us remember God has raised us and made us sit with Jesus. Gloomy things look brighter, and trying things become manageable from higher up.
3. GOD ANSWERS MY CALL: Vs. 15“He will call upon Me, and I will answer him.”
            The third promise to those who love Him and call on His name is that God will answer him. What a wonderful blessing is this to know and remember. I John 5:14-15, “And we are confident that he hears us whenever we ask for anything that pleases him.15 And since we know he hears us when we make our requests; we also know that he will give us what we ask for.”
            It gives me the confidence to know that when I pray in line with God’s word, He hears me. Not only that, He will answer me, though I may not understand all the ways in which He works. By studying the prayers in the Bible, we can learn that God knows what is best for us. He is our loving father who longs to bless his children with good gifts. According to James 1:17, “Whatever is good and perfect is a gift coming down to us from God our Father.”
4. GOD RESCUES ME FROM TROUBLE:  Vs. 15, “I will be with him in trouble; I will rescue him and honor him.” The fourth promise to save from trouble those who love the Lord is found in the middle of verse fifteen. When we are in deep trouble, we tend to cry out to God and say, Lord, where you are? Can’t you see what I am going through? I don’t sense your presence!         In turn, God will respond to us affirmingly saying, “I have not left you to your misery, I am not too far from you, I am right here with you in your trouble, I will rescue you. The bible has many examples where the people of God saw this promise of God’s rescue fulfilled.
5. GOD HONORS ME:  I will honor him. Psalm 91:15 The fifth promise to honor those who love God is in the last part of verse 15.  Let’s admit all of us like to be praised, acknowledged, recognized, or honored for who we are and what we do. Have you ever thought about what it means to be honored by the God of the universe? He honors us by calling us his sons and daughters. In the Bible, honor also means wealth, riches and prosperity. God will bestow earthly riches and success on those who love Him and Call on His name.
6 & 7 LONG LIFE & SALVATION Vs. 16, “With long life, I will satisfy him and let him see My salvation.” In this verse, God doesn’t only say that he will prolong our life, means we will have many more birthdays. No! He says He will satisfy us with a long life. For those who love God, the promise is a long, satisfying life. Loving is like having your cake and eat it too. 
            On top of giving us long, satisfying life, the best is yet to come when he ushers us into His eternal presence to be with Him forever, that is the seventh promise of salvation.  It secures our future, but it starts now. Jesus constantly reminded us, “Salvation is now.” In order to live with Jesus eternally, you have to begin that journey with him today by accepting him as your savior. The word salvation has a much deeper meaning which includes health, security, deliverance, and provision. God is promising all that and much more to those who love and Know Him. Amen!

           


  


Sunday, June 2, 2019

FEARLESS


FEARLESS! (Psalm 91:5-6)
Introduction: The early American Indians had a unique practice of training young braves. On the night of a boy’s thirteenth birthday, after learning hunting, scouting, and fishing skills, he was put to one final test. He was placed in a dense forest to spend the entire night alone. Until then, he had never been away from the security of the family and tribe. But on this night, he was blindfolded and taken several miles away.
            When he took off the blindfold, he was in the middle of thick woods, and he was terrified. Every time a twig snapped; he visualized a wild animal ready to pounce. After what seemed like an eternity, dawn broke, and the first rays of sunlight entered the interior of the forest. Looking around, the boy saw flowers, trees, and the outline of a path. Then to his utter astonishment, he beheld the figure of a man standing just a few feet away, armed with bow and arrow. It was his father. He had been there all night long.
            What a unique way for this native American father to teach his boy, as long as he is around, he has nothing to be afraid. Similarly, it assuring to know that we too have nothing to be scared of at night because our heavenly father is staying up all night protecting us. For the past few weeks, we have been studying Psalm 91 to learn about and trust in Gods protective power.
            The author of Psalm 91 had experienced this type of protection while leading over 600,000 people from Egypt a place of slavery to a land of freedom and flowing with milk and honey. His name is Moses, who wrote both Psalm 90 and 91, primarily in the form of a prayer.
            Last week we looked into God’s tender loving care like a mother hen and his strong defense and protection of a shield and bulwark. We learned that God’s care, comfort, and security does not depend on our faithfulness but his faithfulness. Today we will see how His protective power will enable His children to live Fearless Lives. Psalm 91:5-8.
            Growing up, we all experienced fear of all kinds. Certain fears are usual during childhood. Young kids often have fears of the dark, being alone, strangers, and monsters or other scary imaginary creatures. I remember Joanna when she was three years old, in the middle of the night would run to our bedroom because she was afraid of the shadows of a tree branch thinking that it was a ghost. Fear is programmed into the nervous system and works like an instinct.
            However, when fear becomes intense, it turns into a phobia. For a person struggling with a phobia, fear becomes extreme, and out of proportion to the potential danger they feel. Phobias cause people to worry about, dread, feel upset by, and avoid the things or situations they fear because the physical sensations of fear can be so intense.[1]
            Phobias are one of the most common forms of mental illness, affecting between 8.7 to 18.1% of people in the US. Among many other phobias, social phobia also known as a social anxiety disorder seems to be affecting a lot of people. Socially phobic individuals are terrified to engage in a conversation with a stranger. Do you have a particular type of Phobia?
            How is fear described in the Bible? In the OT, the Hebrew word Yare means to be afraid, to fear, to be feared, to be dreadful, to be reverenced, to terrify, etc. There are two main types of fear described by Yare. 1. The emotional and intellectual anticipation of harm, what one feels may go wrong for him. 2. A positive feeling of reverence for God expressed in worship.
            Over and over we read in the scripture, God tells His people, “Do not Fear.” Why do you think He continually reminds us not to be afraid? Because it is through faith in God’s word, we are protected, and since fear is the opposite of faith, the Lord knows fear keeps us from operating in faith that is necessary to receive. Among many other worries, the Psalmist highlights how God delivers his children from two types of fear in verses five and six.
I. I WILL NOT FEAR TERROR
            Vs. 5, You will not be afraid of the terror by night,..Or of the arrow that flies by day; The terror by night includes all of the evils that come through man: kidnapping, robbery, rape, murder wars, terrorism, etc. These things also cause much horror or dread or anxiety that comes from what evil men can do to you. God says to us, you will not be afraid of any of those things, because they will not approach you.
            When we are afraid at night, it is an indicator that we are not dwelling and abiding in the shelter of the Most High and believing His promises. How can we go to bed at night and sleep peacefully and unafraid? The answer is, “God’s faithfulness.” In Psalm 121:4, “He who keeps you will not slumber. Behold, he who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep.”
            We have to believe these promises of God’s protection in our heart and say it loud with our mouths that God is faithful to all of His promises. When we look around, there are so many things that can frighten us, but we are a people who are called not to walk by sight but by faith. We have to choose to believe His word more than what we see, more than the terror of the night.
            I remember once in India; I was traveling by train for a teaching assignment. In the middle of the night, I woke up as the train came to a sudden halt. As I rushed out of the compartment, I saw chaos everywhere and panic on the faces of people. The officials got the news that there was a bomb placed in that train. After a thorough search, they told us it was only a scare. They let all the passengers back into the train, but everyone was hesitant to get back and fall back into sleep.  What if they searched everywhere but forgot to search under my berth?
I entrusted myself to the Lord, who would keep me from all terror at night and went off to sleep. Our God can protect us from all the dangers that could fall upon us at night.
            Faith doesn’t deny the existence of terror, neither will it remove terror altogether, but it gives us courage and wings to overcome it by placing our lives into the hands of our loving heavenly father who is powerful, and stays up all night watching over us.
II. I WILL NOT FEAR THE ARROW
            Vs. 5, You will not be afraid of the terror by night, or of the arrow that flies by day.” In this verse, we see two threats of the enemy, the terror by night, and the arrow by the day. These two threats are about physical warfare. At whatever time of day or night, the threat of the enemy may come, but according to this scripture, God promises to keep his people safe.
            The second category of evil is the arrow that flies by the day. In an ancient war situation, arrows were like our current aircraft missiles mighty. The arrows can pierce, wound, and even kill the enemy. Whether we are aware are not we Christians are involved in Spiritual warfare.
            Ephesians 6:12 reminds us that our fight is not with people but with the principalities, powers, rulers of the darkness of this age, and spiritual hosts of wickedness. In Ephesians 6:16, we read, “in addition to all, taking up the shield of faith with which you will be able to extinguish all the flaming arrows of the evil one.” “Flaming missiles” (NASB)
            God is not promising here that these arrows will miss us, but when we take up the shield of faith, by which we can extinguish all flaming arrows. The apostle Paul uses a war analogy of flaming arrows or fiery darts to explain their destructive power. The Greek word for “fiery means to be on fire. The enemy throws things at us to inflame us.
            Paul doesn’t specify what those fiery darts are; he left it to our imagination. I see these fiery darts as the inflammable words of the ungodly, such as the unwarranted criticism, unfounded accusation that could come from the unbridled tongues of people who have no fear of God. These are the ones that our enemy uses to attack and destroy God’s children.
            At times if they are not watchful, even God’s children could be used by the enemy to hurt others through their words. But far more dangerous attack could come from within ourselves.   The enemy uses our accusing voice to attack us inwardly. In counseling terms, it is called “the negative self-talk.” The lies we believe and the negativity we speak to ourselves are far more damaging. For example, we say to ourselves and believe specific lies like:
            “I am ugly; nobody loves me; everyone hates me. It is no use trying anymore. I have failed so many times, I know I am a failure, and I will never be able to do it. I can’t go on like this; I quit; I give up. God, why don’t you make everything O.K?  This negative profile is not an uncommon one in our society. We are telling ourselves, “Nobody loves me.” And I give up.
            How can we protect ourselves from these self-targeted vicious arrows? We can overcome these arrows by taking up the shield of faith and believe in what God says who He is and what He says who we are in Him. If you are struggling with the thoughts of unworthiness, believe that you are fearfully and wonderfully made and God takes delight in you. When your heart is condemning you, remember there is no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus.
            When you think no one loves you, remember how Christ demonstrated His love for you by going to the cross on your behalf. When you feel tired, and at the verge of giving up confess with your mouth out loud that His grace is sufficient and you can do all things through Christ who strengthens you. I can go on and on, but you get the point.
            Dear friend, are you afraid of something this morning? The antidote for fear is having Faith in Christ. When we believe in our hearts and confess with our mouths that God is our shield and fortress, then we can live fearless lives. Then we can boldly say that we will not be afraid of the terror in the night or of the arrow that flies by day. Our heavenly father’s eyes are upon us, he loves us immensely, and he knows how to protect his children Amen!
           
           


[1] https://kidshealth.org/en/teens/phobias.html