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Tag: easter

Praying Together

Dear Friends,

As we journey through Holy Week at Hope we are meeting online via Facebook Live on Hope’s Facebook page. To pray together for our day, community, nation, and world. All are welcome to join as we:

Pray Together on the Sevens

7:00 AM CDT
7:00 PM CDT

The recordings of these prayer times will also be posted for those who are not able to join us in person. If you have any specific prayer requests or celebrations please send them to me at stephen@galesburghope.org

Additionally, please download the daily prayer guides to participate together in this time of prayer.

Return to this page each day to download and use them in our times of morning and evening prayer.

Looking for the latest prayer guides?

They have been moved here.

But if Jesus is Raised

He is Risen

Dear Friends,

A few days ago many of us gathered in our churches for Easter celebrations and the retelling of the story of Jesus’ death and resurrection. At my church we enjoyed a tremendous breakfast prepared by the men of the church, the children made and launched rockets (yes, you read that correctly) and our church family and many guests joined together for a great Easter worship service.

Of all the holidays and festivals in the church, for Christians, none is more important than Easter. Without Easter Christmas is nothing more than a weird and tragic story of a child being born. It is impossible to overstate the importance and significance of the resurrection of Jesus to Christians and human history. As Paul says, “And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins” (1 Corinthians 15:17 NIV). But if Christ is raised, well then that changes everything.

While it is helpful to speak in generalities and say that “everything” has changed but what is the specific significance of the resurrection? Many of us would answer that Jesus died to pay the penalty for our sin so that we might have eternal life and get to go to heaven when we die.

This answer is basically accurate, but it is also significantly inadequate. The resurrection of Jesus means so much more. Over the next several weeks, with the help of a book by Dr. Stephen Seamands, Give Them Christ: Preaching His Incarnation, Crucifixion, Resurrection, Ascension and Return, we are going to dive deeper into the meaning and significance of the resurrection.

Before we get there, I want to ask you a question: What would you say is the significance of the resurrection of Jesus?

Please feel free to send an e-mail or post a comment. I would love to hear what you have to say.

Blessings,
Stephen

It is the third day

tombstones in a graveyard

What makes Jesus different? The statesman and missionary E. Stanley Jones in his sermon Christ is the Answer captures the hope of this Easter morning.

“Three days after Mahatma Gandhi had been assassinated, the radio did nothing night and day but eulogize and talk of the father of that great land, Mahatma Gandhi. Mrs. Naidu, the great power of India, gave a broadcast on Sunday, three days after the assassination. She was a Hindu, but had been in contact with the Christians a good deal, and she broke out in this eloquence. She said, ‘O Bapu [‘little father’], O Little Father, come back. We’re orphaned without you. We’re lost without you. Come back and lead us.’ I could sympathize with the eloquent plea of a stricken heart, representing a stricken nation, but do you know what I felt as I sat there? I thought, ‘O God, I’m grateful I don’t have to cry that cry for the leader of my soul: ‘O Jesus, come back. Come back. We’re orphaned and stricken without you.’ I do not cry that cry. He has come back. It is the third day and he’s alive. And wherever the heart is open, there we’re released. And wherever your heart whispers, ‘Help,’ he’s right there to give that help. And you can’t whisper a sigh within your heart without he’s right there beside you, meeting that need.”

He is Risen!

Source:
Jones, E. Stanley. “Christ Is the Answer.” 20 Centuries of Great Preaching: An Encyclopedia of Preaching. Edited by E. Clyde, Jr., and William M. Pinson, Jr. Vol. 9. Waco, TX: Word, 1971. 318-23.

Courage in the Place of Our Death

tangled vine

On February 29 of this year, Senior Chief Special Warfare Operator (SEAL) Edward C. Byers Jr. was awarded our military’s highest honor, the Congressional Medal of Honor, having already been awarded the Bronze Start five times for bravery and the purple heart twice for being wounded in combat. Here is just a portion of the text of his commendation:

Chief Byers, completely aware of the imminent threat, fearlessly rushed into the room and engaged an enemy guard aiming an AK-47 at him. He then tackled another adult male who had darted towards the corner of the room. During the ensuing hand-to-hand struggle, Chief Byers confirmed the man was not the hostage and engaged him. As other rescue team members called out to the hostage, Chief Byers heard a voice respond in English and raced toward it. He jumped atop the American hostage and shielded him from the high volume of fire within the small room. While covering the hostage with his body, Chief Byers immobilized another guard with his bare hands, and restrained the guard . . .His bold and decisive actions under fire saved the lives of the hostage and several of his teammates. By his undaunted courage, intrepid fighting spirit, and unwavering devotion to duty in the face of near certain death, Chief Petty Officer Byers reflected great credit upon himself and upheld the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.

During most of the hours of our days there is little opportunity to be either a coward or a hero. We eat our meals, do our work, chat with friends and passing strangers. Nothing significant really happens. John Eldridge says that every man is haunted by the question, “Do I have what it takes?” We wonder if we would have the courage to stand-up if the need were to arise. I think it is one the reasons action movies and combat video games are so popular with men. it allows us to live vicariously a life our soul tell us we could never live.

Rarely in life do we have moments of true courage. Rarely are we called to sacrifice ourselves for something that could truly cost us.

At the cross, we are confronted. The cross is the place of our redemption but it is also the place of our undoing. At the cross, we are confronted with the question “Do you have the courage to be changed?”

At the cross, all are welcomed as they are, where they are. But at the cross none are allowed to stay as they are, where they are. Everyone is expected to change. Everyone is presented with the option to change and asked if they have the courage to do so.

On the day of Jesus’ death a man named Joseph of Arimathea was confronted by the cross. He had been a secret follower of Jesus but now he was challenged to come out of the shadows. It is easy to be a follower of Jesus when the crowds are chanting “blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!” It is quite another to come forward and risk everything for a dead man and lost dream.

Joseph was a prominent man in the community. A wealthy, successful man who had been elected to the Sanhedrin, the highest Jewish ruling body. The easiest thing for him to do was to remain in the shadows, no one had to know he had ever hoped in this man. But the cross confronted him to come out. Joseph was needed to take courage and come before Pilate and ask for Jesus’ body. Joseph was needed to take courage bury the body of Jesus in the tomb that had been prepared for Joseph.

There is an irony to this story. Into the place of Joseph’s death he placed the Lord of Life and by doing so Joseph received life. What seemed like a step that stood the chance of costing him everything actually gave him more than he could have hoped for. But first, he had to have the courage to come out of the shadows and allow life to enter his place of death.

Each of us have places of death in our life. Areas of darkness no one is allowed to see. Areas prepared for our death and undoing. Areas we will never voluntarily go. It is to these areas the cross calls us to take courage. Will we have the courage to put the Lord of Life into these places? We know something that Joseph could not have known that day: The impossible promise of resurrection and life, if we will allow Jesus into our place of death.

Will you do it? It will take more courage than you ever thought you had.

Stephen

 

 

 

Giving credit where it is due:
The concept for this series of blog posts and its accompanying sermon series draw from the masterful work, Seven Words to the Cross: A Lenten Study for Adults by J. Ellsworth Kalas.

A season of repentence

ash cross

Dear friends,

Lent, the forty-day season leading up to Easter, is an unpleasant time of year. The goal is not to excite but to lead us to repent. It’s not like Christmas. Christmas is a joyous time of anticipation. We look forward to a birth. We have been longing for the Messiah to come and now is he is here. The celebration is like that of parents who have been unable to have children suddenly finding out they have become pregnant. It is a time when we live out the anticipation and celebration of a child’s birth. This is Christmas.

Lent is different. This is a season of the cross. A season of suffering and repentance. A season of renewal and stripping away. Just as Jesus was stripped of his clothes, his dignity, his friends and family and laid bare for the redemption of the world we strip away all that stands between us and the purposes of God for our lives.

Many join in this season by stripping from their lives things which have been allowed to come between them and God in a forty day season of fasting for renewal. The challenge for each of us, whether we formally participate in fasting or not, is to examine our lives for those things which have been allowed to creep and in, then repent and strip away. I have known many who give up caffeine, chocolate, diet soda, or some other food. While it is true these things may be standing in the way of God, their presence, as a stumbling block, often signals something far deeper in our soul. Do we have the courage to peel back another layer and dig deeper for the true source which stands between us and God? Lent is not a spiritualized diet it is deep soul cleansing.

What are you willing to give up? For a long time, I have known I needed to abandoned social media. I have felt its narcissistic envy-inducing claws pierce deep into my soul. I have known I needed to step away but have made many excuses about it being essential to my job. This year, I will stop the excuses. I have found a tool that will allow me to push content to my church’s page without my actually having to be on social media. Beyond that, my participation will go silent. My cover and profile pictures will be replaced by that of the cross. A reminder to this season’s call to repentance.

What about you? What have you allowed to infect you soul which needs to be stripped away? Will you join me in this season you choosing your own act of renewal and repentance?

Pastor Stephen

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