Last week I got to see firsthand the damage done to the town of West, Texas by a massive explosion at the local fertilizer plant. I was immediately struck by how tightly compacted the small town of West is and I was also struck by how far reaching the destruction was in that small of a place.
Some homes and buildings were blown apart and burned. Some homes, and particularly the local nursing home, looked as though a massive force had just pushed violently against the structures causing walls and roofs to buckle. Scattered throughout other parts of the town were homes and buildings with a single hole in the wall or roof patched up with plywood or a tarp. It also hit me that the deaths of 15 people in a town this size meant that almost every family was touched in some way. That unseen pain in the loss of life is undoubtedly greater and deeper than any of the visual damage.
This week as I thought about what I had seen in West and what I had read in the book of Romans, some things came together. The power of sin to wreck lives so destructively is clear in both West, Texas and the letter to the Romans. Someone who was trying to make a living, made some bad choices about how powerful products were handled. A fire sparked a devastating blow that buckled the lives of many. Sin destroys our lives the same way. It starts as small mistakes that we make in the course of everyday life. "For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God" Romans 3:23.
Those mistakes may seem harmless for a long time, even years. Then one day, those mistakes prove to be incredibly costly to us and to those around us. People who are simply in the wrong place at the wrong time are hurt and wounded and death comes. Death is always the unavoidable consequence of sin, "For the wages of sin is death..." Romans 6:23.
But I also saw firsthand how everywhere in that little town where destruction was present, there were also signs of redemption. Texas Baptist Men volunteers were clearing the rubble and setting up to start the task of rebuilding. Volunteers were sacrificing their time to clean up destruction that they had no part in, but they were choosing to have a part in the redemption and the rebuilding. "But where sin increased, grace increased all the more so that, just as sin reigned in death, so also grace might reign through righteousness to bring eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord." Romans 5:20b-21.
So many were hurt by being at the wrong place at the wrong time. I was blessed to be there at the time I was, to see the right thing happening in God's time. Though the work of sin is always to bring death, the work of God is always to bring life - eternal life. Let's take a walk through that this Sunday.
For the journey...
Tim
Friday, June 21, 2013
Monday, June 10, 2013
Vacation Bible School
I ran across this and wanted to let all of you read this so you know we are a part of a larger effort when we do VBS. This is not the usual time for my blog post but this is very timely for us. Please check this out and hit "Read More" when you get to that tab to see the best part of this post.
CALL TO PRAYER: Vacation Bible School
I am glad to be a part of something big. Aren't you?
For the journey...
Tim
CALL TO PRAYER: Vacation Bible School
I am glad to be a part of something big. Aren't you?
For the journey...
Tim
Thursday, June 6, 2013
If only...
If only...
I have had several friends in ministry that have spoken about how those two words speak with so much regret, so much remorse. "If only I had not spent so much time at work, maybe my marriage would have worked out." "If only I had put my daughter in a different school, maybe she wouldn't be in the trouble she is in today." "If only we had walked closer with the Lord, we would not have made the bad decisions that we made." "If only we had not gotten in so much debt, may be we could have retired by now." "If only..."
Those words do echo with sadness. But Paul had a different direction in his "if only" statement. It is in Acts 20:24, "I consider my life worth nothing to me, if only..." Sounds pretty bleak doesn't it, but look at what comes next. "...if only I may finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me - the task of testifying to the gospel of God's grace." Instead of an "if only" that looked back, his looked ahead. His "if only" was his life focus - his life mission, not his life regret.
I read these words and I decided this week, this is a great focus for me in mid-life. I need to memorize them and make sure that my "if only" looks ahead, not back. I need keep my focus on the truth that life has meaning and purpose if only we focus on the task that God has given each of us - "to testify to the gospel of God's grace."
This Sunday we are going to look at what does it mean to be on mission? Each of us has a story to tell. Each of us has a task before us. How will you choose your "if only" for the rest of your life? Looking back or looking ahead? With an "if only" from regret in something you did or with an "if only" that leads to renewal in something God is doing?
For the journey...
Tim
I have had several friends in ministry that have spoken about how those two words speak with so much regret, so much remorse. "If only I had not spent so much time at work, maybe my marriage would have worked out." "If only I had put my daughter in a different school, maybe she wouldn't be in the trouble she is in today." "If only we had walked closer with the Lord, we would not have made the bad decisions that we made." "If only we had not gotten in so much debt, may be we could have retired by now." "If only..."
Those words do echo with sadness. But Paul had a different direction in his "if only" statement. It is in Acts 20:24, "I consider my life worth nothing to me, if only..." Sounds pretty bleak doesn't it, but look at what comes next. "...if only I may finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me - the task of testifying to the gospel of God's grace." Instead of an "if only" that looked back, his looked ahead. His "if only" was his life focus - his life mission, not his life regret.
I read these words and I decided this week, this is a great focus for me in mid-life. I need to memorize them and make sure that my "if only" looks ahead, not back. I need keep my focus on the truth that life has meaning and purpose if only we focus on the task that God has given each of us - "to testify to the gospel of God's grace."
This Sunday we are going to look at what does it mean to be on mission? Each of us has a story to tell. Each of us has a task before us. How will you choose your "if only" for the rest of your life? Looking back or looking ahead? With an "if only" from regret in something you did or with an "if only" that leads to renewal in something God is doing?
For the journey...
Tim
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