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A Different Perspective Official Podcast

Berni Dymet
A Different Perspective Official Podcast
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  • A New Understanding of Blessing // Blessed to be a Blessing
    When we hear someone talking about God’s blessing, it’s easy to think “You beauty” – and we unroll our shopping list for God. But if we want to experience God’s blessing, we need to understand how He works. We're talking this week on the program about God’s blessing. And I've called this week’s series, “Blessed to be a Blessing”. We can get a crazy mixed up view of what blessing actually is. You have a look around at the advertising on television, the billboards; everything is screaming at us, “If you buy me you'll be happy. If you buy me that emptiness you feel inside will be gone.” Sure it can be fun to buy things and to have things but they never, never fill that inner void do they? They never satisfy. The advertising industry just keeps on chanting it's mantra, “Buy me and you'll be happy,” knowing that if that thing ever made us contented and happy, if it ever filled the void, we wouldn't buy anymore and they'd go broke. God doesn't bless the way the world does, God’s blessing is something entirely different, it fills, it lasts and most importantly it overflows. Let’s get together for a few minutes and check it out. We have a natural tendency when we think about God’s blessing, “Wow, things are going to get better for me. After all, blessing is divine favour, now, what do I want? New job, a promotion and that would be good, a husband or a wife or a better husband or wife. I know that shiny new car I saw in the glossy weekend magazine last Saturday, that's what I want. I want a holiday; wow I'd like to go business class for once. I'd like to pay my credit card off.” We have our shopping lists don't we? Here’s the danger, as we think about God blessing us, we believe the advertising industry and we reduce God’s blessing down to some narrow, materialistic, sugar daddy level. It's so easy to do, the me, me, me thing. Let's put that right into perspective, I'd like to read you something that Jesus said, you can find it later in the Bible in Luke, chapter 6, verse 20. Looking at his disciples He said this: Blessed are you who are poor for yours is the Kingdom of God. Blessed are you who hunger now for you will be satisfied. Blessed are you who weep for you will laugh. Blessed are you when men hate you, when they exclude you and insult you and reject your name as evil because of me. Rejoice in that day and leap for joy because great is your reward in heaven for that is how their fathers treated the Prophets. But woe to you who are rich for you have already received your comfort. Woe to you who are well fed now for you will go hungry. Woe to you who laugh now for you will mourn and weep. Woe to you when all men speak well of you for that is how their fathers treated the false Prophets. But I tell you, love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you. If someone strikes you on one cheek give him the other also. If someone takes your cloak don't stop him from taking your tunic as well. Give to everyone who asks you and if anyone takes what belongs to you don't demand it back. Do to others as you would have them do to you. Wow, I think Jesus would have failed Marketing 101 here. Does this sound like some sugar daddy version of God’s blessing to you, some new car or a bigger house? God has a heart for little people, this stuff that Jesus is talking about here is edgy, it is bad marketing, if you were trying to make a pitch for disciples the marketing machinery would have this sugar coated wouldn't it? They'd sit him down and say, “Look here Jesus …” But Jesus said, "If you want to be a follower of me, it's a tough gig. There's suffering and there's pain and there's rejection and that’s a promise of God, hallelujah." So Berni, what’s this got to do with blessing huh? Come on, tell me about the next big flash car and the next big flash house and the promotion and the status and the recognition and the fame and the adulation, where the heck is God’s blessing in all of this Berni? Well just a few verses on, in the same breath, Jesus puts the blessing in perspective, he says this: Give and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over will be poured into your lap, for with the measure you use, it will be measured to you. Mmm, blessing has to do with giving, in fact it's a promise of Jesus. This is how God works. Take the blessings that you already have, take what God’s already given you and give it away and with the measure that you give; God will give back to you. You see, here's blessing in action, blessing involves sacrifice and what Jesus is saying in this stuff is that it's not about having a big party now. No, no, no! It's about giving away your blessings to other people and God will bless you back. Whatever we have, whatever we have to give – maybe it's time, maybe it's money, maybe it's concern, maybe it's compassion – all of those things cost us. When I came to Christ twelve years ago, I was pretty wealthy, not mega rich but by any global standard you'd have to say I was very well off. Pretty flash house, a car, a job and I lost most of it in marriage breakdown and divorce. But what I still had was a good income earning capacity. I was a consultant in the IT Industry and there's good money in that. Now I wasn't comfortable at that stage giving my money away, I just didn't do that. I wanted to hang on to it. I wanted to grow my wealth and get wealthier and wealthier and have a bigger house and a flashier car. And I learned what it meant to lose everything. You may have heard me once tell the story that there was one week there, early on, when I was going through the whole marriage breakdown thing where I didn't even have enough money to buy food for the next week and the Church that I started going to had a car boot sale, you know, you opened your boot and you had stuff and people came and you sold it and what I sold at that car boot sale paid for my food for that week. My, how I'd fallen and then I really thanked God because the pastor we had there, a guy called Phil, gave me some really good teaching about blessing and giving and the link between those two and I made a decision. I decided that the resources that I had, that I'd always hung on to and clung on to, in fact they had failed me. All my money, all my skills, all my gifts, there's none of those things that I have that weren't given to me by my Father in heaven, nothing and so I put them at his feet. I decided to radically give my life and what I had. I mean, this whole wealth thing hadn't worked for me so I thought this makes sense to me. Now I'm not some super good Christian guy, I'm not that at all, it just kind of made sense to me and what I'm sharing with you is the lessons that God taught me in my life. I learned to give radically, firstly of my finances. When you're earning a lot of money and someone talks to you about giving a tenth of it away, a tenth of it happens to be an awful lot when you're earning a lot of money. My gifts, my abilities, I left the consulting job to go onto a ministry salary, you don't get rich doing that. But this is what I discovered, God’s abundant blessing in my life started chasing me down the street. Not success and fame, career and wealth, not that at all. God met all my needs and he's thrown some extras in along the way too but there's something much bigger, much bigger than that; a deep and intimate and personal relationship with God. As I sit down in the cool of the morning as I did this morning and had fellowship with God, I am so blessed; I would give up everything else just for that. For me, that puts life into perspective that puts life into balance. Jesus said: First seek the Kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these other things will be added afterwards. And they were, as we give blessing out, God pours blessing in, it's as simple as that, it's God’s way.
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  • The Interruption of Blessing // Blessed to be a Blessing, Part 2
    They say that God is a God of Blessing. Hmm. So how come there’s so much suffering in the world? What went wrong? How come I have to suffer? Where’s God’s blessing then? The classic dilemma when we talk about God’s blessing is, "Well okay, so if God is a god of blessing, how come there is so much suffering in the world? How come I've had to go through this and this and that? How come there are natural disasters? Come on, how come?" And you know something, that's a very real and a very reasonable question. How come? And it's something that's always in the back of my mind when I talk with people about God’s blessing because chances are someone who is listening is going to be suffering right at the moment. And that person may well find any notion of God being a god of blessing, pretty difficult to swallow just now. So let’s unpack that just a bit today. How come? Right from the beginning God was a god of blessing. Yesterday on the program we had a look at the very, very first chapter in the Bible, Genesis chapter 1. And when God creates the first living creatures he blesses them and gets them to multiply and fill the earth. And when God creates us, male and female, he blesses us by handing over the whole creation to us. “Here, take all the birds and the fish and the beasts and have it all, it's yours to use, subdue them, fill the earth, multiply.” And when you look through the Bible, the whole concept of blessing, the word bless, appears over 350 times but at the same time there's plenty of bad stuff that happens to people right through the Bible, and plenty of bad stuff that happens to people today, here and now. Sometimes we look at them and quietly think, “Well, you know, he deserved that.” But other times they're innocent people – really bad things happen and we wonder, "Well, if God is a loving God like those Christians say that He is, this God who wants to bless us, supposedly, if that’s who He is, how can He let those things happen to people like that?" That is a really good question. One of my favourite actors, (I grew up as a baby boomer) one of my favourite television shows of all time is MASH. It's an American program and it ran for, I think, 11 seasons. And the star of MASH is a man called Alan Alda, an actor whom I just enormously admire and respect. He played Hawkeye Pearce in MASH and played a whole bunch of things afterwards. I saw him recently interviewed on a program called, "Inside the Actors Studio". The interviewer was a man called James Lipton and he asks Alan Alda a question like this, he says, "If there is a God, what do you want to say to him when you get to heaven?" Now, Alan Alda is a really friendly, warm, engaging kind of guy and it's been a really warm and friendly and engaging kind of interview until Lipton asks this question. And Alda's face goes black and dark and serious and he says something like this, "God. God, tell me about the earthquakes and the tsunamis and the suffering. Tell me all that was just a bit of a joke." And a lot of people feel like that about God. Christians talk about a God of blessings, Christians talk about a God of love but there's a whole bunch of bad stuff happening in this world. How do you explain that away? Okay, why? If God is a god of blessing, how come all this suffering is going on? So we've looked at God’s own account of his creation in Genesis, chapter 1. The very first living creatures he creates he blesses them and says, "Go and multiply and fill the earth." He creates us and he hands the whole thing over to us, enormous blessing. And here are you and I, joint owners in creation because God created us in his own image and he handed the whole thing over to us. And when you stop and think about that that was a huge blessing. Right at the point of creation, God was in the blessing business. It's profound. It's a plan for us to live in relationship with him. But then something happens. Even though God has given Adam and Eve the Garden of Eden, to keep it, to till it, to be blessed there – He has this perfect plan of blessing – Adam and Eve rebel! They do the one thing that God says, "Don't do this” but eat the apple from this one tree. And there were consequences. Rebellion against God always does have consequences. And God to the woman said, "Well, I will greatly increase your pains in child bearing. With pain you will give birth to children, your desire will be for your husband and he will rule over you." And he turns to Adam and he says, "Because you listened to your wife and ate from the tree about which I commanded you, you must not eat of it, cursed is the ground because of you. Through painful toil you will eat of it all the days of your life. It will produce thorns and thistles for you and you will eat the plants of the field, by the sweat of your brow you will eat your food until you return to the ground since from it you were taken, for dust you are and to dust you will return." Enter pain and suffering into the history of humanity and it's been there for all of humanity ever since. Now you might say to me, "Berni that is just so insensitive. What about when there's a still-born baby? What about the tens of thousands that are killed in a tsunami? What about the young teenager who gets raped and murdered? How can you say that it's sin? How can you say that it's punishment from God? How can you say that?" Here it is, God made us in His image but when we don't like who He is, when it doesn't suit us, we try and remake him in our own image. God's a god of blessing but that blessing happens when we're in a relationship with Him. It's really well laid out in a part of the Bible and I encourage you to go have a look and read this, Leviticus chapter 26. It's one of the first books of the Old Testament. It's a perfect summary of where God stands on this. The old covenant was the promise between God and his people of Israel and he lays that out in this chapter, let’s go there beginning in verse 1. He says: Don't make idols or set up sacred stones and bow to them because I am the Lord your God. Observe my Sabbaths and have reverence for my sanctuary because I am the Lord your God. If you follow these decrees and you are careful to obey my commands, I'll send you rain in its season and the ground will yield its crops and the trees of the field their fruit. Your threshing will continue until grape harvest and the grape harvest will continue until planting and you'll eat all the food you want and live in your land in safety. I'll grant peace in the land and you'll lie down and no-one will make you afraid and I'll remove the savage beast from the land and the sword will not pass through your land ... You'll pursue your enemies and they'll fall before you. Five of you will chase a hundred and a hundred of you will chase a thousand and your enemies will fall by the sword before you. I'll look on you with favour, I'll make you fruitful, increase your numbers and I will keep my covenant with you. You will still be eating last years harvest when you will have to clear it out to make room for the new. I'll put my dwelling place with you, I'll be among you, I'll walk among you. I'll be your God and you will be my people because I'm the God who brought you out of the land of Egypt so that you wouldn't live in slavery anymore BUT if you will not listen to me and carry out all these commands, if you reject me and my decrees and abhor my laws and fail to carry out my commandments and so violate my covenant then I will do this to you. I will bring upon you sudden terror, wasting diseases, fevers that will destroy your sight and drain away your life. You'll plant seed in vain because your enemies will eat it. I'll set my face against you so that you'll be defeated by your enemies. Those who hate you will rule over you and you will flee even when no-one is pursuing you. You see? God is a god of blessing. God wants to have a relationship with YOU and with me and that's the greatest blessing of all. I was talking to a man recently, my own age, he's a really good businessman. He has three adult sons and he wanted to bless his sons, form a company with them and do this and do that. One by one they rejected him, they turned their backs on him and they walked away and he said, "I wanted to bless them but I couldn't.” The greatest sadness of his life and that's what God's like. God is a god of blessing but when we reject him, when we turn away from him, there are consequences. Now, how do God’s blessings still fit into this world that's turned its back on him? Well we'll look at that tomorrow on the program.
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  • Blessing from the Beginning // Blessed to be a Blessing, Part 1
    They say that God is a God of Blessing. Is He? I mean – does God really want to bless you and me and if He does, how does that happen? The words "God" and "Blessing" somehow seem to go naturally together. In fact, God is a God who wants to bless us … or is he? Each one of us can look back on our lives and point to some times of great joy and blessing, and times of hurt and disappointment and sorrow and loneliness. When it seemed that if there is a God who blesses, well he must of deserted us or at least that's how it can feel. What do you think? If God is God, is He a God of blessing or is that just some unbalanced kind of secular view of God that's crept in? Or is God a god who really doesn't care about us? For me at least getting a real handle of what God’s up to in my life, what his plans are, is kind of where the rubber of faith hits the road of life. Why is this whole thing of God’s blessing so important? I think, at least I see a lot of misunderstanding about God and his heart and where He stands on blessing us. There seems to be two extremes, two opposite ends of the spectrum where people take extreme views. At one end it goes something like this, "God wants to bless me therefore I should believe him for the next new Mercedes and the next million dollars and the next bigger house". In effect, "God is some sort of sugar daddy, it's all about me, I am at centre stage, I name it and I claim it". And you know something? Lots of Christians teach it and lots more believe it! The problem I have with that is, when I compare that on the one hand to Jesus on the cross – He lost everything for you and me, even the clothes on his back; beaten and brutalised, he lost his life. And this sort of 'God is a sugar daddy' end of the spectrum really jars with the cross, doesn't it? And it leads to some of the worst excesses – the telly-evangelists pressuring people for money and flying around in private jets. Is that where this understanding of blessing should end up, do you think? Now the other end of the spectrum says you have to be poor to serve God. Money is evil! We just had someone ring up at midnight the other night and leave a message on the phone to say, "How dare you sell a CD and then how dare you ask for support for your ministry. Money is evil; people who have money are evil." I was talking to a man in India recently and of course India is a land of huge extremes; you have the very rich and you have many, many very, very poor people. And he was very critical of this particular Christian leader who just had a nice house in a nice suburb, he believed it was wrong. You see, I look at that end of the spectrum and I go to the Bible and I read about Abraham. Abraham was the man that God chose to engage with first. Abraham was rich, King Solomon one of the wisest men that ever walked the earth, he was very rich, he was full of God’s wisdom. You can see the problem. At the one end you can have people getting these extreme prosperity views in their heads. Thinking it's all about them and their material wealth and it plays right into the hands of the world – me, me, me! The next plasma TV; the next big car; if you don't have that then well ... obviously you don't have enough faith. On the other hand this perception that you have to be poor to be a Christian, well if that were the case, who would ever fund the work of the Lord on this planet. I mean, God has always chosen to fund his work through his people. I know some very, very wealthy Christian business people who do an enormous amount to fund the work of the Kingdom of God. Talk of the pure monetary thing is the reality of tragedy and pain and suffering and a lot of times it's indiscriminate. Earthquakes, tsunamis, a young person who loves Jesus and dies at the age of eighteen with cancer, car crashes and divorce and retrenchment, all that stuff of life, we all experience those things, are you with me? So what's Gods plan? Does God want to bless you and me or not? Is it okay for us to ask for his blessing? Is it okay to expect his blessing or is that just presumptuous? This is an important question because it is where the rubber hits the road. You get up in the morning and you maybe pray and you look forward to the day, how do you pray? What do you give thanks for? What do you ask for? Is it okay to ask for God’s blessing in this difficult situation that's going to happen at work this afternoon? God, where are you in all of that? That’s why we're having a little series this week on the program that I've called ‘Blessed to be a Blessing’. I'm a simple man. I just open the Bible, I see what God's saying on the subject, get it in balance. God’s Word empowers us and the problem that I often see when people look at this subject of God’s blessing is that you can take just one verse and say, "Oh, that's it." And you end up with one of those extreme positions that I was talking about before. But over the course of this week, on the program, we're going to get to look at the whole thing from God’s perspective. Is God a god who blesses? What does blessing mean? The main connotation is God’s divine favour – God intervening to make something better or to give us something that will bring joy or happiness. There's financial blessing of course, there's spiritual blessing, there's physical blessing like healing, anything and everything, God’s divine favour, his blessing becoming active in our lives. Question is, is God in the blessing business? When I see the word "bless" or "blesses" or "blessed" or "blessing", 358 times in the Bible and the very first time it appears is in the first chapter of the Bible, Genesis chapter 1, verse 22. Let’s go there and have a bit of a look. This is where God creates all of creation. He makes light out of darkness and the heavens and the earth and the oceans and the dry land and the plants and the first time he creates a living creature, this is what He says: So God created the creatures of the sea and every living and moving thing with which the water teams according to their kinds and every winged bird according to its kind and God saw that it was good." Now look at this, "God blessed them and said, "Be fruitful and increase in number and fill the water and the seas and let the birds increase on the earth. And the second time the concept of blessing happens in the Bible is just a few verses on in that same chapter, that first chapter of Genesis, verse 26: Then God said, "Let us make man in our image and let them rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air over all the earth and over all the creatures that move along the ground." So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created them, male and female, he created them. God blessed them and said, "Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it and rule over the fish in the sea and the birds of the air and over every living creature that moves on the ground." And then God said to them, "I give you every seed bearing plant on the face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it. They'll be yours for food and to all the beasts of the earth and all the birds of the air and all the creatures that move on the ground - everything that has breath of life in it - I give every green plant for food. And it was so. Let me ask you something: Do you think God is in the blessing business? The whole creation thing, the whole idea of creation is that God created this wondrous, wondrous universe and then he kind of comes along and makes you and me and he makes us part owners, joint owners in the whole of his creation. He gives the whole thing over to us and says, "Look it's yours, you own it, you subdue it, you use it, it's my blessing to you." But as we'll see tomorrow on the program there was something we did that interrupted that blessing, that broke that blessing. And even after we do those things, even after we rebel and turn our back on God, you know something, it doesn't change who God is.
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  • Loving With Our Hearts // Living Life as an Ambassador of Christ, Pt 10
    It’s one thing to be an Ambassador of Christ – that’s what those who believe in Jesus are called to be. But there are Ambassadors …. and then there are Ambassadors. You know what I mean. And the thing that makes the difference – is what’s going on in their hearts. In fact, it makes … all the difference. Over the last almost two weeks I guess, what we've been doing is taking a look at the different aspects of the Apostle Paul's assertion that he, and by implication you and me if we believe in the amazing, loving, compassionate, powerful Jesus, that we're ambassadors for Christ. Have a listen again to how he put it. 2 Corinthians chapter 5, verse 20. He says: So we are ambassadors for Christ since God is making His appeal through us. We entreat you on behalf of Christ to be reconciled to God. We've talked a lot about what it means to be an ambassador through whom God would make His appeal to a lost and hurting world. We've looked a bit at the way that Jesus was an emissary of God into this world when He became a man. How He communicated Gods message of grace to the blind and the poor and the diseased and the needy and the outcasts. I wish we could spend weeks, months more taking a closer look at that. Maybe we'll come back to that in a little while. Because at the centre of everything everything is Jesus. The Son of God, the maker of the heavens and the earth. So as we draw this series together today with so much more left to talk about, I had to decide on one thing, the most important thing and that most important one, the one that Paul at the end of 1 Corinthians chapter 12 calls, ‘the yet more excellent way’ is love. That's what we're going to finish up with today, love. Had a friend who several years ago now was called into Christian ministry out of Australia into the UK. Now the particular place where he went to live and to work was, well it was part of the UK that was really depressed economically. His job wasn't to work directly with the people but when I went to visit him, a few years ago now, and I'd wander around town I could feel the depression. There were derelict factories, rusting decaying remnants of the industrial age. There was high youth unemployment in this place. And as I spoke with the people there seemed to be a hopelessness, a lostness, an emptiness in this part of the country and it really hit me between the eyes. See we Australians, I don't know if you've noticed, are by and large a pretty optimistic lot. It's in our natural character. We have this "can do" attitude that sometimes comes across to other cultures as being a bit brash. And so when I was confronted with this sad community spirit it really leapt out at me. As I chatted with my friend over coffee late one night, he too confessed that he was finding it really difficult. Moving from one culture to another is never easy but the sadness and the listlessness and the hopelessness all around in this place, particularly coupled with a very long, grey, cold winter, was really getting him down. Now please understand me, I'm not knocking the Brits. I love travelling to England but there are parts in that country and any Brit will tell you this, there are parts of the country where there's high unemployment particularly amongst the youth and its tough going. This was one such place. Anyhow a year or so later I was chatting with this same man over Skype. He's a great guy, I love keeping in touch with him and so I assumed he was still doing it tough in this unfamiliar culture and I started empathising with him. And his response, his response really shocked me. He said in affect, 'No, no, no, we love it here. Absolutely love it here. This is where God means us to be and it's really great'. Now, it's quite a turn around so I asked him, "What's changed? You've shifted your position a long way from where you were and what you were feeling a couple of years ago." And I had a listen to him talk and it clicked. I could hear it in his voice. He had fallen in love with the people. God had touched his heart and he had a real compassion for the people out there. The unemployed, the people with that sense of hopelessness and listlessness and no future. He'd become part of a local Church, he was part of the local community and he realised that the joy and the enthusiasm and the optimism that he had in his heart could be a light in that place. He had fallen in love with the people. Sometimes we Christians feel like misfits in this world. There's a reason for that. As Jesus said in His prayer just before He was crucified in John chapter 17, He said: That we are in the world but not of the world. The Apostle Paul makes the point that we're citizens of heaven not citizens of this earth. We're misfits just like my friend the Aussie felt as though he was a misfit in his new surroundings. And when we're misfits the easiest thing to do is to criticise and to poke fun and to belittle them and to complain. "I know Jesus. I have my life sorted. I know what's right and all those other people out there where somehow they're less than me." We criticise, we argue, we demean, religious superiority. You see it often happens between races and cultures. One race looks down on another because of their skin colour or their traditions or just who they are. And I've seen people get this wrong over and over and over again. I love it when the Apostle Paul says in 1 Corinthians 13, it doesn't matter what gifts or abilities you have or what you do or how much you give to the poor, if you don't have love you're nothing. And the love that Jesus showed, it was more than just love, it was compassion, it was empathy, it was kindness and gentleness. It was reaching out and touching the leper, not just healing him but touching him. It was having compassion for the hungry crowd and then feeding them. There are two letters in the New Testament, 1 and 2 Timothy and they're written by Paul to his young protégé Tim. And in the 2nd one Paul writes these words. 2 Timothy chapter 2, verses 24 to 26: And the Lords servant must not be quarrelsome but kindly to everyone. An apt teacher, patient, correcting opponents with gentleness. God may perhaps grant that they will repent and come to know the truth and that they may escape from the snare of the devil, having been held captive by him to do his will. See the bit I love most in there is the bit about God perhaps granting they repent and come to know the truth, that they might escape the snare of the devil to be set free. It's so easy for someone who loves Jesus and who's passionate about Him. Who wants to see people's lives transformed, to start getting an idea that it's up to us. You know we see many, many, many lives transformed through these radio programs all over the world. But let me tell you this, with all that I am nothing that I can do, nothing that I can say can change a life. Not a single one. Just yesterday I received an email from a man in another country who wrote about a particular program he'd listened to over the New Year. He said, "One small thing you said, God took that and changed my life." He was an alcoholic and he had stopped drinking. I can't do that, only God can do that. When by His Spirit He takes His Word and brings it to life in our hearts. That's Gods job. And when you or I become arrogant or pushy or superior in our attitude, we're working against God and God always, always, always opposes the proud but He gives grace to the humble. I don't care what gift you or I have, how hard we work for Jesus, how much cash we contribute to His work, unless we have love my friend we are enemies of God and enemies of our fellow men and women and children. These three things remain (writes the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 13). Faith, hope and love. All really good but the greatest among these is love. Whatever we do, however we do it, if we do it in love God can use it. Kind, gentle, patient, tender, that's what Paul writes to Timothy, the wisdom of a man towards the end of his life after many years of difficult, tough ministry. Bound in chains he is when he's writing this, about to be executed, writing to his young protégé just starting out in his career. Kindness, gentleness, patience and love.
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  • Healing with Our Hands // Living Life as an Ambassador of Christ, Pt 9
    When we have a need – a real need – something we can’t do or fix or resolve for ourselves – what we need, is a helping hand. And if we get that helping hand – the person who’s attached to that hand, well, they go up in our estimation. They earn the right to say things that others can’t to us. Funny thing happens through a helping hand. Whenever there's a disaster somewhere in the world, a tsunami or an earthquake or a cyclone or a tornado, it seems to me that wealthy countries like my own, the countries with the logistics and the equipment and the resources to help, it seems that we take forever to mobilise. When people are buried under the rubble they have only days, perhaps hours to live. And what they need right then is specialist search and rescue teams with sniffer dogs and listening equipment. And the survivors, what they need straight away is medical help, food, water, shelter, clothing. And the last thing I want to do is to be critical but it seems to me that it takes so long for the wealthy countries to mobilise their resources. We know these disasters happen every year, they just do and I'm always left scratching my head as to why it takes us so long to respond. What those poor people need within the first 24 hours is a huge influx of capability to save lives. And these days you can pretty much fly from anywhere to anywhere in not much more than 24 hours and yet time and time again these disasters happen and it takes weeks for us to mobilise. Does that strike you as odd? You know as a taxpayer in a relatively wealthy country albeit a smallish population but nevertheless a wealthy country, when I see the way public monies are spent the last thing I have a problem with is my government setting aside some serious money to establish and maintain some sort of rapid response capability to help other nations when disaster strikes. But as easy as it is to sit here and criticise a government I wonder whether this lethargy in responding to need isn't something you and I experience in our personal lives as well. I read about an extreme example in a newspaper article recently. Have a listen to this short article: A south Korean couple addicted to online games let their baby starve to death whilst raising a virtual daughter. Parents Kim You- Chul and Choi Min-sun spent up to 12 hours a day at a internet cafe tending to their avatar child in the online game Prius. But they left their real baby home alone and fed her just one bottle of milk a day. Police have charged the couple with child abuse and neglect. Now it's pretty bizarre and as extreme as one might think, 'got nothing to do with me, I'm not like that, I don't neglect my children like that'. Well I hope not but what about our friends? What about our extended family members? What about our neighbours? What about the couple next door whose marriage is falling apart? We hear them screaming and arguing but we never invite them over for a barbeque to share in their lives and for them to share in ours. What about the person in Church? You know the one, single, overweight, their life’s a mess, they talk a bit much and no one ever invites them anywhere to their place on a Sunday for lunch. What about that man at work? You can see he's a workaholic. Ruining his marriage, neglecting his children, ruining everything. All for want of a friend who can show them a better way of living. Where are we then, you and I? I'll tell you where we are, we're online like that Korean couple. We're watching television. We're doing all the things we want to do in the comfort of our own homes and our own lives. The more affluent we become the less we care for one another. But we justify that, we rationalise it away. We sit in our homes with more than enough, many of us more than enough, telling ourselves, 'We worked hard for it and now we need a rest'. We're living virtual lives. Watching TV shows about cooking instead of cooking for our friends and ourselves. TV shows about travelling instead of travelling to see our families. Raising our virtual lives, our virtual gods and ignoring the real world. I know it sounds harsh but sometimes we need to be direct. Sometimes we need to call a spade a spade. God does that too. Have a listen. 1 John chapter 3, verse 17: How does Gods love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or a sister in need and yet refuses to help? Now, I know that's hard because there's such a need out there in the world. Sometimes we look at the news and see the misery and we just turn it off because you and I, we can't make a difference. Okay, I understand that although we always can make a difference, a small difference. But there are so many people closer to home. Sometimes even in our homes or next door whom we have the opportunity to serve. To heal, heal with our hands with our service. Heal with what we do as well as what we say. Speaking first hand here there is nothing, absolutely nothing that speaks more about Gods love into someone’s life than when we step in to help them with that one thing that they need help with. Sometimes it can be the smallest thing, a word of encouragement, a meal to someone who's just out of hospital, a visit, just a phone call. Sometimes it's loving them over the long run, being there for them. Whatever it is, when we have a need and someone just comes along and meets that need there is nothing that speaks more about the love of Christ than doing that. Believe you me, I know, it was the people doing just that who played such a powerful role in me coming to faith in Jesus Christ. In fact, their investment in meeting my needs bears fruit every day as I sit down behind this microphone. Listen again to what Paul writes about how he sees his role and ours in this world. 2 Corinthians chapter 5, verse 20: So we are ambassadors for Christ since God is making His appeal through us. We entreat you on behalf of Christ to be reconciled to God. Imagine now an ambassador of a really wealthy country who's taken up his or her post in a poor country. And one day that poor country suffers a tsunami or a devastating earthquake. And that ambassador from the wealthy country moves heaven and earth to quickly mobilise rescue and medical capabilities. They come quickly, they meet the desperate need and then finally when the crisis is over what do you think the ambassador's actions have just said to the people of that poor country about the wealthy country that the ambassador represents? That ambassador's actions will have spoken volumes to this poor nation about how much the rich nation cares for them. This simply isn't rocket science, it's true on a macro scale and it's true on a micro scale. It's true on a national scale, it's true on the individual scale. Do you believe in Jesus? I do and anyone who does is called to be an ambassador of Christ. And as the Apostle Paul writes it is through his ambassadors dotted all over the planet that God is making His appeal for people to be reconciled to Him. His appeal to give them a new life. His appeal to give them an eternal life. And we don't have to look very far, you and I, to find people who need that. It's often right under our noses. And we can spend time in prayer and at Church and in worshipping God and all those good and wonderful things while babies starve, while marriages next door fall apart. While people right next door to us or across the street live in fear. Or we can go, we can go and be ambassadors of Christ. For how does Gods love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or a sister in need and yet refuses to help?
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    9:43

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God has a habit of wanting to speak right into the circumstances that we’re travelling through here and now; the very issues that we each face in our everyday lives. Everything from dealing with difficult people … to discovering how God speaks to us; from overcoming stress … to discovering your God-given gifts and walking in the calling that God has placed on your life And that’s what these daily 10 minute A Different Perspective messages are all about.
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