Mercy And Justice Kissed

We like to think of God as some kind of Father Christmas character in the sky. We like to hear about His love and mercy, but the idea of a God who hates sin and will judge us for doing wrong is not very popular. We reverse things — instead of seeing ourselves in God’s image, we prefer to create God in our image.  We read verses that tell us “God is love” and apply our own definition of love.  We come up with a God who doesn’t judge sin, who doesn’t care all that much what we do as long as we don’t hurt anybody and don’t do anything too bad. We invent a God who wants a relationship with us on our terms.  This is not the God of Exodus 34. The God of Exodus 34 hates sin.

We may wonder, how can a God who is love hate anything? The answer is that because God is love, therefore He must hate. If you love life, you must hate murder, for murder destroys life. So also God must hate evil because He loves good, and evil destroys good. And God must punish sin. If God allowed evil to go unpunished, He would not be holy. Sin is the very contradiction of His nature.

God owes us nothing. He made us, and we rebelled against Him. If He were to send us all to an eternity in hell, nobody could accuse Him of injustice.

But God is also merciful. Proverbs 16:6 tells us that iniquity is purged by “mercy and truth”. Mercy without justice is not truth. Mercy without justice is to tell the lie that sin doesn’t matter. Only when there is truth as well as mercy can we be cleansed from our sin.

God’s justice demands that sin be punished. God’s mercy allows a substitute to take our place, to pay the penalty we deserved. And God’s love provided His Son as our Substitute. When Christ died on the cross, a legal transaction took place where He took our sins and gave us His righteousness. The Son of God bore the wrath of the Father’s justice in our place. Because of His work on the cross, His righteousness is placed on our account. When God looks at us, He sees, not our sin, but the perfect righteousness of Christ.

Mercy and justice.
It all comes together at a hill called Calvary.

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Cheap Worship: Moving Out Of The “I Don’t Get Anything Out Of It’ Syndrome

You’ve heard of cheap grace. But have you heard of cheap worship? “Cheap grace,” Dietrich Bonhoeffer says, “is grace without discipleship,” grace without cost, without taking up our cross. In Bonhoeffer’s own life, the cost of discipleship was very high. He was executed by the Nazis just before the end of World War II.

If cheap grace is grace without cost, cheap worship is worship without cost.

In 2 Samuel 24, Araunah the Jebusite was ready to give David whatever he needed, for free—oxen, threshing sledges, ox yokes, the works. But David insisted that he himself should pay for it. He said, “I will not sacrifice to the Lord my God burnt offerings that cost me nothing.” He knew that God deserved the very best.

David then bought the threshing floor and oxen from Araunah. He built an altar to the Lord there, and sacrificed burnt offerings and fellowship offerings that he had paid for. David’s worship was not cheap, it was costly.

I wonder how much of our worship is cheap worship? When we enter God’s presence this week in corporate worship, will we be skimpy? Cheap worship exists when our worship costs us nothing. We enter God’s house, but do not intend to give ourselves. We listen to songs, but we do not intend to sing our praise. We listen to prayers, but we do not bring Him our own intercession. We flippantly lay a dollar in the offering plate, but we have not thought about our giving. We approach the sermon and our main concern is what we will get out of it.

Too often, that is our whole approach to worship—we are preoccupied with what is in it for me. What will we get out of it? The problem with cheap worship is that we are at the center, and because of that we put little or nothing into it.

What would costly worship look like? First it would put God at the center and realize that God is not here to serve us, but we are here to serve Him and give Him glory. We are coming to place our lives humbly before Him. We are coming as givers, not takers.

Costly worship realizes that the main gift God wants today is our lives. It would prepare for the Lord’s Day by thinking about the prayers we will bring. It would approach offerings with a “first fruit” mentality to honor God by giving Him our best. It would approach the Scriptures with a ready mind to hear the Word of the Lord. Contemplating the cost of our redemption, it would resolve to never approach God flippantly. Rather, we would come to lay genuine adoration and thanksgiving at His feet. In so doing we would discover the paradox that—the more costly our worship, the more we actually do get out of it!                                                         (DON SWEETING)

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Are You A Suitable Helper For Him?

Genesis 2:18 (NIV) The LORD God said, “It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable  for him.”

Man was not meant to be a hermit. A solitary condition is not good. God designed Eve as a helper suitable for Adam. That is God’s plan and God’s intention for women.

I can hear the howls of derision from those with secular minds. The Biblical view of a helper is a team member not a slave. What they accomplish together is their accomplishment and not his alone. He must share the glory with his helper. In the upside down world of the Kingdom, the servant is the greatest. They need each other and are incomplete without each other.

The spiritual picture here is of Christ and the church. We were made new creatures from the blood that flowed from His side, just as Eve was made from the blood flowing from Adam’s side. We are to be His helper. That is why He calls us co-laborers. It is not as though He could not do it by Himself, but that He wants to include us in what He is doing. He wants to share His work with us for our benefit. It is not good for us to be alone. We need to be at His side, laboring with Him for His glory.

Genesis 2:24 (NIV) For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh.

We are to be joined to Him so that all other attachments are a distant second. Does that describe your relationship with the groom, Christ Jesus? By His Spirit, are you a suitable helper for Him?

Lord Jesus, help me to be the helper You intend me to be as I yield to Your life in me. Amen (SOURCE UNKNOWN)

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Evidence Of God’s Love… In A Blade Of Grass

Have you ever noticed that the majority of the things found in nature are green? Is it any coincidence? God created our eyes to see all the beautiful things He made for us to behold. God created the grass, trees, plants and leaves to be green for a reason. Green is the color that our eyes MOST EASILY see.

Psalm 23:2 says: He makes me lie down in green pastures,
He leads me beside quiet waters,”

The Lord created the grass, the trees and most plants to be green because He loves us. There are slight variations of green, but all are shades of a deep, emerald green. And He made this emerald green plant life to be the most abundant thing in our sight when we’re outside. Everywhere we look: trees, grass, bushes, hedges, and yes, even weeds. All shades of green. Imagine if plants were some other color. Can you imagine purple or red grass and trees all year long? That would be very hard on the eyes. No, God made all things to compliment the other. Our eyes best see the abundance of green in all of creation.

Sing to the Lord with grateful praise; make music to our God on the harp.

He covers the sky with clouds; He supplies the earth with rain and makes grass grow on the hills. (Psalm 147: 7-8)

The Lord, the Most Creative Designer Ever, made brightly-colored flowers and fruits that add splashes of color when they are in season. And, in autumn, the trees change color from deep emerald to blazing purples, reds, oranges, and yellows. Both are refreshing to our eyes. Imagine a world where there are no flowers, and no changing of the leaves in autumn, before winter comes. God knew exactly how to create a beautiful world for our eyes to behold!         (SOURCE UNKNOWN)

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A Rockin’ Royal Christmas Musical Video

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yB7v1Uhdl2I[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x6AylRfzR80&[/youtube]

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Young Leaders Development Program (YLDP) Testimonies

Testimony 1  (Wei Zheng) :
“Jit Pang!” “I will rearrange your face!” These were probably the lines being repeated the most throughout the whole of YLDP 2012 camp. But surely, these are not the only things campers brought home from the five days they spent in CheFoo, Cameron highlands.

I can’t say much about the first day of camp, simply because I wasn’t there!  My arrival at the campsite was delayed by a landslide which resulted in me arriving very late.  However, I would say that every subsequent day got better and better.

Every day, things started with a prayer meeting. This meeting was not compulsory but all campers were encouraged to attend. This was followed by breakfast and worship session. After that, campers were sent to their respective levels; namely (pre-level, level 1, level 2, and level 3); for their sessions. Then there was lunch, team-building activities, dinner and the plenary session by our camp speaker.

Every night, we would have a plenary session where the camp speaker, Jit Pang, would share with us a short message.  He shared about the roadblocks in our lives and removing them, having accountability, caring for your neighbor or community, stepping out for God and taking God seriously.

During the plenary session of the second night, Jit Pang talked about roadblocks in our lives which hinder our walk with God, roadblocks which stop us from being serious with God. We were asked to identify the hindrances in our lives, stop making excuses and don’t hide our pain.

On the third night, the speaker asked all campers to move to one side of the hall and the helpers, full time workers, youth counselors and pastors to the other side of the hall. The campers signify us, all the youths in general, and the helpers signify those full time youth workers, counselors and pastors all across the nation. All campers were encouraged to go thank those helpers who were present for their effort in making this camp possible. This activity reminds us of the sacrifices, contributions and various efforts put in by these people for the youths with only the intention of meaning them well and helping them with their walk with God.

On the last night, the speaker shared with us about his projects and undertakings in the town of Kluang. We were also challenged to make a commitment of taking God seriously and being accountable to someone. This sharing evoked in us of how ungrateful we were and the things we took for granted, such as food on the table every day, a home with water and electricity, the privilege of going to school.

I was taken aback by the experience in the camp as this camp really struck a chord in me. I took time to think, digest, and try to understand fully the message which was being conveyed instead of being rash and riding on the emotions of the camp which; I’m sure many not excluding yours truly; have done so many times in the past.

I thought that the message the speaker tried to convey to us was rather relevant. It mirrors the many struggles we young people encounter when he was talking about the roadblocks in our lives such as past experiences, traumas, troubles, impressions and doubts. This message spoke to me more on the third day of camp when we were having sessions in our respective levels where in level 2, we were talking about spiritual formation. It was then that we were asked to be honest and draw a timeline regarding the significant points in our lives and also a simple picture which depicts the condition of our heart, of what is going on inside our heads. After this simple activity, I realized the significance of the message the night before. Things which may seem small and not worth mentioning actually left impressions in our hearts and in many ways hinder our walk.

Regarding the message on the last night, I was touched as I saw a situation back home which bears much similarity. In youth, we have this chart consisting of the six ministries which we try to reach out to, namely: Boys Brigade, Girls’ Brigade, BM, Chinese, Orang Asli and the Hot Kitchen. The message that night was about caring for your community and loving your neighbor. It struck me then when we were asked about how much we care. How much do we really care about the situation around us? Our neighbors: the people we see every day, every week, by the roadside, the poor, the hungry and the uneducated. Have we stopped by and asked about their lives? Being of capable means, have we helped them in any way? Maybe we can’t help ALL those that are underprivileged, but what about those whom we see in our schools, college, university or even workplace? When that message was being presented, I thought of the chart in youth. The amount of people who wrote their names and commit themselves to help out in the ministries is so scarce, almost next to nothing. What went wrong there? Not only that but how many members of the youth actually went out and help? How many of them actually went for Orang Asli, help out in Hot Kitchen or the many areas where help is sorely lacking?

Then there was also the message about committing ourselves to taking God seriously and being accountable to someone. This is important as we see many people backsliding in their faith. This message not only applies to the youth but also to people of all age groups. We were reminded a few times during that night that when we commit, we must really do it because more often than not, the decision made was based on the heat of the moment and after a while the “feeling” dies off and the commitment was forgotten. We were asked to think carefully before making any sort of commitment. Those who made a commitment that night were asked to be accountable and their names were taken down for further follow up to ensure the commitment was kept. It’s not that commitments are bad, but if we make commitments rashly, we often live to regret it. Maybe it’s not my place to talk about commitments but those are my sincere thoughts.

All in all, I’m very thankful for the opportunity to attend this camp. As a wise man aptly puts it, “the journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step”. So it is with our walk with God. Did we treat our walk seriously? Care for our neighbors? Are we living each day knowing our identity in Christ and reflecting His goodness? Maybe it’s time we start.

Wei Zheng

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Testimony 2  (Samuel Lau) :
It was a five-day long YLDP camp at Chefoo Cameron Highland.  Weather was cold and windy – makes us young people feel hungry most of the time. But otherwise, the overall environment is near perfect.

Day 1 : We arrived at Chefoo around 4pm, on-board the bus from Trinity Methodist Church PJ.  Nothing much to do on the first day – found out our bedrooms, got our T-shirts, then went for dinner. Plenary for the first day was kind of meaningful as our speaker Jit-Pang talked about his life and his views on Christians’ actions in different aspect of life. As a Christian, are we living like how we are supposed to live? Do we do what we are supposed to do?

Day 2 : Waken up by the other 3 roommates at 6.30am but we took our time to shower. Worship after breakfast makes us all energetic, then followed by the different levels’ lessons.  For me, I am currently at level 2 and the first lesson of level 2 is about maximizing.  We played the life game, made me realize that every decision made in life takes up a lot of time. Our life should be in accordance to God’s will and we should not waste it in whatever way we want.

Team building on the first day is super-tiring as there were 6 stations as 12 groups are competing 1 on 1 on each station, before rotating to different stations.

  • knee ball
  • cooking game (with people splashing water)
  • face to som (“scissors-paper-stone” with face)
  • Humillipede
  • Tug of war

Each of these games have their own meanings.

Then plenary night is basically on what we have done in our walk in God. We have to be honest with ourselves and reflect on what we have done in our life whether it is right or wrong.

Day 3 : Level 2 lesson on the third day is about discipline and also identifying red flags and roadblocks in our life.  Lesson on foundational discipline was also taught. Other than that, spiritual discipline was also being introduced to us.

For the team building, each group had been given a task to design and build a wreath and come up with a skit that includes our camp theme, bible verse (Ephesians 2:10) and all sorts of different random conditions.  Therefore, that very night is “special night” where all teams will present the wreath and perform respective team skit.

Day 4 : Level 2 lesson on the fourth day was on “Media”. We learnt more about our limits with regards to the different aspects of media, as in what are the limitations and when do we tell ourselves that this is not supposed to be watched/read/listened to.  We also learnt about sectarianism and syncretism in life. Choices are always ours to decide, whether we involve ourselves in worldly stuff (syncretism) or isolate ourselves from it (sectarianism). Either way, we have learnt that there are good and bad.

For the team building on the 4th day, it teaches us a lesson that we have to pass down what we achieved to the next generation so that they also may do the same, in order to get a bigger and better result.

Day 5 : Fifth day is our closing day, so there are not many activities we do. However there are some closing challenges for us. We are challenged to change and not to be the same as previously after we finish this camp, we have to strengthen our walk and also put more faith on God.

Samuel Lau

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And For The Rest Of The Year….?

Did you ever wonder about Mary and Joseph after all the hoopla ended? There they were, miles from home, in a barn where their Firstborn had come into the world. Baffled by visits from shepherds, chosen by God to be earthly parents of the Savior, their bewilderment must have been great. What are we to do now?  They must have thought.

Instead of fretting about it, they went about being good Jews. The law called for them to have the Child circumcised and then go to the temple for the rite of purification, to present their heavenly Son to the Lord. And so they went. There they met Simeon and Anna, whose words must have puzzled them even more. They not only heard praises about their Son but also strange and ominous predictions

And yet, after all this was over, Mary and Joseph returned home to Nazareth and began to live as most other parents did. There were daily tasks to be done. There was a Child to raise. There were the Jewish laws to keep. And so they lived as good Jewish people, keeping the faith of the generations before them. Perhaps they remembered that Isaiah had said that the Lord God would cause righteousness and praise  to spring  up before  all  the nations.

Perhaps they knew, more than we realize, that their earthly Son, Jesus, and God’s heavenly Son, Emmanuel, was to be the One to put that into place. But in the meantime, life in Nazareth went on.

Life after Christmas must go on. The waiting is over; the celebrating is over; the special foods are either eaten or frozen. Decorations are put in boxes to be stored for another year. And for the rest of the year…?

Let us remember Mary and Joseph. They went about keeping the faith that they had been taught. In the ordinary time that is coming, and until next Christmas, let each of us keep the faith as children of God and heirs of God’s reign.

God, You are a parent to us all. Help us, like Jesus, to grow, to become strong, and to become wise in Your ways. In Jesus’ name we pray.  Amen. (EXCERPT FROM “EVERLASTING LIGHT” BY SANDY DIXON)

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Fourth Sunday In Advent

Probably artists have portrayed the Christmas scene more than any other Bible story. Without much trying, we can envision the scene. Whether it is from a painting, a story, a song, or even a television show, we have “seen,” so to speak, this birth many times.

The scene is set well enough that we see the people and hear the sounds — the barn or cave, lit at night by lamps or torches; the animals making chewing sounds while Mary and Joseph are talking quietly. Perhaps Jesus is crying or nursing. The shepherds come excitedly, followed by townspeople. The Christmas star is bright in the sky. It is just as we imagined.

Imagine yourself somewhere in this scene. Where are you? Who are you? How do you respond? This is the crux of the whole Christmas story: God has given us a Christmas present — God’s only Son. What is our response? Where do we fit into the picture? The holy Scriptures give us direction in our lives for helping to prepare for the reign of God to come on earth. It can happen in our lifetime! Step out of the picture now and go from Bethlehem into the world, telling this Good News of great joy to all people. Christ our Savior has come!

God of miracles, help us to be messengers of peace, evangelists who bring good news and tell of Your salvation to all people. In Jesus’ name we pray. Amen.

(EXCERPT FROM “EVERLASTING LIGHT” BY SANDY DIXON)

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