Avoiding the Spiritual Germ of Negativity

spiritual germ

Lot’s of people are coughing and wheezing these days, and many of them are contagious. It is amazing that something so microbial that it is unseen can bring an otherwise functioning person to a grinding halt.

So far, I’ve managed to remain germ-free.  I have taken my vitamins, eaten lots of yogurt, and washed my hands so much I have shed a few layers of epidermis.  I can’t get sick; because I have too much to do. When a preacher gets sick, he sounds like a cross between James Earl Jones and Inspector Clouseau.   Not an attractive sound.

What is a Spiritual Germ

An insipid spiritual germ exists that is even more highly contagious and dangerous that the one that causes a physical URI. This germ is called NEGATIVITY.

…No human being can tame the tongue. It is a restless evil, full of deadly poison. With it we bless our Lord and Father, and with it we curse people who are made in the likeness of God. From the same mouth come blessing and cursing. My brothers, these things ought not to be so. – James 3:8-10

Gossip, complaining, fault-finding.  These are the streptococci of the spirit. When you hear them, run!  Stay away.  Another’s negativity may infect you and make you miserable.

You test positive for negativity when you hear it from your own lips.  God prescribes repentance and prayer as the remedy.  He promises to forgive every sin we confess to Him and CLEANSE us from all unrighteousness.

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Maybe We Should Boycott Boycotts

boycotts

Christians love boycotts. Somehow we have come to equate moral superiority with boycotting.  Let an individual, institution, or industry oppose something important to us, and, immediately we call for boycotts.

Maybe it’s time to rethink our penchant for boycotts.  Could it be that we might win a battle with a boycott but lose the greater eternal, spiritual war? Maybe the time has come to boycott boycotts.

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Four Reasons We Should Rethink Boycotts

1.   Jesus’  example.

I cannot remember a time in the New Testament when Jesus boycotted.  In fact I remember reading about a few times He went places boycotted by the religious superstars of His day. 

He dined in the homes of at least two tax agents for the loathsome Roman Emperor. Matthew and vertically-challenged Zacchaeus both felt the scorn of the religious folks in Jesus’ day.

Jesus hung out with prostitutes and adulteresses.  He befriended the ceremonially unclean, socially outcast, and spiritually broken.  He didn’t condone their sinful behavior, but He didn’t boycott them either.

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2.    Culture’s need.

We usually feel the temptation to boycott those people and places who stand in contrast to what we believe.  How will they ever believe, though, if we withdraw from them.  They have a clearer path to redemption with our loving investment in their lives.

The humanist in Starbuck’s needs to hear about Jesus from us.  We can’t share Jesus if we boycott. 

The employees of Target need to see the love of Jesus.  They can’t see Him in us if we aren’t there. 

The cashier at the store that sells beer and lottery tickets will need answers when her life falls apart.  We can’t point her to the answer in Jesus if we refuse to go in the store.

Jesus didn’t come to call the righteous to repentance, but sinners.  If we refuse to lovingly interact those who need Him, how can we share Jesus with them?

3.   Our testimony.

Do you refuse to allow people who work at the places you boycott to come to your church?  Of course not.  You not only allow them to come, you invite and encourage them to come.  At least, I hope you do.

“I want you to come to my place, but I would not dare come in your place” is stark hypocrisy.  I am afraid our culture identifies us more by what oppose than by Who we represent.  They know us more as people against them than people who love them and want to introduce them to Jesus.

Why should they listen to our message about Jesus if we want nothing to do with them at their level?

4.   Unintended consequences.

Sometimes, actions we intend for noble purposes yield counter-productive results.  In the process of making our point, could we possibly cause greater harm in another area?

The economic impact of a boycott may cause innocent people to lose jobs that provide for their family.  That innocent person may even attend our church.  If they don’t, our boycott will ensure they never will.

The reputation of a boycotting church may hinder that church’s evangelistic efforts.  Sometimes we unnecessarily close doors through which we can share Jesus.

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A Greater Good

I understand that sometimes we have to “draw a line in the sand” against the moral decay of our time.  But that line must always be drawn over issues and not individuals.  We cannot sacrifice an opportunity to share the Gospel on the altar of boycotting.

Please understand, I am not saying we should compromise Biblical teaching or heartfelt convictions.  We cannot cave into to sin and be salt of the earth.  However, we can state our case for right without voluntarily cutting off ourselves  from those who need Jesus.

Paul made it his aim to be all things to all men so that by all means he might win some.  Instead of limiting our interaction with those outside of our faith, let us look for ways to make ourselves more accessible.

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3 Reasons to Forgive Your Enemies

Forgive Your Enemies

God has a way of using man’s evil intentions for His good and glory.

Jesus spoke a word of forgiveness to those mean souls who meant to destroy Him and annihilate Him. They wanted Him gone, and thought that now they had finally accomplished that feat. Surely His death would be the end of Him and His “trouble-making” revolutionary ways and teachings.

But Jesus understood that what they were doing was all a part of God’s plan. He HAD to die. He HAD to be the substitutionary sacrifice for our sins. While his persecutors and enemies thought they were doing themselves a favor.  However, they  were the unwitting agents of God accomplishing their own undoing. They meant it for evil, but in their act of crucifixion, God was working the ultimate act of good. He was providing for our salvation.

And Jesus said, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” And they cast lots to divide his garments. – Luke 23:34

Why You Can Forgive Your Enemies

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Give Pop-Up Prayer a Chance

pop-up prayer

Pop-up ads are the scourge of the internet.  I have finally eliminated most pup-up ads, but now find myself a victim of pop-up autoplay videos.  Some of the videos are ads; some are news stories.  All of them startle me and distract me from the work I am trying to do when online.

Recently, however, I have been trying to cultivate the proactive of pop-up praying in my daily routine.  Pop-up prayers are spontaneous, short prayers triggered by something that I experience during the course of the day.  I often utter pop-up prayers when driving, talking on the phone, or working at my desk.   I find the more I have intentionally looked for pop-up possibilities, the more involuntarily they have occurred.

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Beware of Hidden Prayer Sins

hidden prayer sins

Prayer is a good thing, right?  Well, it can be.  It should be.  However, prayer is sometimes sabotaged by hidden prayer sins that keep us from the full its benefits.

Hidden Prayer Sins

Below you will find a few hidden sins that lurk in our prayer times.  The list is certainly not exhaustive and you can probably add more.

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Why the Truth of Creation Matters

creation

Of all the words in the Bible, the first five may be the most important: “In the beginning God created.”  Since the beginning of time, hell has unleashed a savage attack on the concept of divine creation.  Today the attack rages at a fever pitch regarding the issues of gender identification and sexual orientation.

Those who are confused about their gender and sexual orientation often make the claim “God made me this way.”  They either blame God for their behavior or they try to justify it in His name.   Even many well meaning but unfortunately misguided Jesus followers have taken this bait and swallowed it hook, line, and sinker.

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Let’s take a moment and consider some very important truth about God’s creation and man’s rebellion.

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Passing My Baton

passing my baton

When it comes to running, let’s just say I am built for comfort and not for speed. 

With that stated, I have great appreciate for sprinters; appreciation borne out of jealousy.  I enjoy watching track events, especially relay races.  With great concentration, these runners also have the dexterity to pass a baton between them while both run full speed.  The winner is the relay team whose runner passes the finish line first with possession of the baton.  A team may have the fastest runners, but if they cannot hand off the baton, they lose the race.  Passing the baton is the most crucial moment of the relay race.

Psalm 71:18 – So even to old age and gray hairs, O God, do not forsake me, until I proclaim your might to another generation, your power to all those to come.

Unless the Lord plans to allow me to live to be 105 or older, I have lived over half my life.  God has gradually placed a burden on my heart to invest in younger people.  I don’t know how many years I have left , but I am in the “changeover box,” as they call it.  I have identified three “runners” to whom I want to hand a baton.

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Seven Questions Jesus Wants to Ask You

seven questions

Have you ever met someone who “just didn’t get it”? You know the type. They live oblivious to how off track their life is. They never seem to learn from their mistakes, in fact, they are a mess but think that everything is O.K.

Sometimes that hot mess may be YOU.

Take heart. Jesus surrounded himself with such as these. His twelve disciples often seemed to demonstrate a phenomenal ability to miss the obvious lessons Jesus taught.

You can read a perfect example of this in Mark 8:9-21.

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Finish Well – A Lesson from Super Bowl 51

finish well

Super Bowl 51 concluded with one of the most epic sports meltdowns in history.  As a fan of the Atlanta Falcons, naturally I felt disappointed.  The game was a reminder that in sports, and in life, it’s not the start but the finish that really matters. To win, the team must finish well. At halftime, the Falcons looked invincible and the Patriots appeared demoralized.  After the next 34 minutes of game time, things would look quite different. 

When Life is Like the Super Bowl

You may find yourself at a place where your life more closely resembles the Patriots at halftime of Super Bowl 51.  Little you do succeeds and the odds seem stacked against you. You’ve experienced failure, disappointment, and defeat.  You just don’t have the gumption to finish well.

I know how you feel.  Life can overwhelm us at times, leaving us feeling hopeless and trapped.  Somedays, we want to just “run out the clock” and get on to the next thing.

Conversely, you may find yourself in a place where you life closely resembles the Falcons at halftime.  Your life has been awesome, God has been good to you, and you are reaping the joy of bountiful blessings.  You have few complaints and as a general rule you find yourself pleased and satisfied.

Believe it or not, the second scenario is the more dangerous of the two.

When things are going well, we need to beware of the temptations of complacency and over confidence.  It is easy to think that things will continue along the same path, so we let down our guard,  We fail to maintain a good level of diligence and self-discipline.  We forget that even a wave of success will eventually break along a shore line. 

However, feeling hopelessly behind and defeated also has its temptations.  When nothing is going right, we discover the urge to give up and stop trying.   We face the lie that our past failure makes victory impossible.  If we give in to this attitude, we will never turn our rough start into a positive finish.

3 Questions to Help You Finish Well

1.  Where Am I?

Whether in success or defeat, we need to be honest with ourselves.  Successes tend to make us delirious, and defeat often leads us to blaming and excusing.  Finishing well requires us to constantly and honestly self-evaluate.  We cannot be sure of the right direction if we are not sure of where we stand at the moment.

2.  How Did I Get Here?

Successes often cause us to over-estimate the role we play in them.  On the other hand, defeat causes us to either under-valuate ourselves or more dangerously, erroneously blame others.  We need to take healthy ownership of where we are in life.  We must acknowledge the positive role others play in our successes and own up to our culpability in defeat.  If we get overconfident in our victories, the wave of success is soon to crash.  If we blame others or make excuses for our defeats, they will forever imprison us. 

3.  What Do I Need to Do to Move Forward?

In success we cannot complacently stand pat and in defeat we cannot remain paralyzed in our pain.  Overconfidence and complacency in success will lead us to stagnation.  Blame and excuses in bog us further in the deep mire of our hopelessness. 

To those who feel they have a hopeless second half, let me encourage you with one truth. Sometimes getting from where you are to where you need to be can seem an insurmountable task.  Don’t let the enormity of the task keep you from getting started.

Chinese philosopher famously wrote, “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.”  Each day, think of at least one thing you can do to move yourself forward from where you are.

Which of the three questions do you most need to ask yourself today?  What one thing will you do today to help you finish well?

Help from the Bible

Not that I have already reached the goal or am already fully mature, but I make every effort to take hold of it because I also have been taken hold of by Christ Jesus. Brothers, I do not consider myself to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and reaching forward to what is ahead, I pursue as my goal the prize promised by God’s heavenly call in Christ Jesus. – Philippians 3:12-14 (HCSB)

We are pressured in every way but not crushed; we are perplexed but not in despair; we are persecuted but not abandoned; we are struck down but not destroyed. We always carry the death of Jesus in our body, so that the life of Jesus may also be revealed in our body. – 2 Corinthians 4:8-10 (HCSB)

See also, Renaming Your Reality


Selfish Expense or Eternal Investment

eternal investment

What if someone offered to give you $864.00 each day every day of your life?  Would you take it?  What you would you do with it?  Generally speaking, you really only have 2 choices.

I think of all the things I could buy; things that my family really needs.  I can think of plenty of frivolous items on which I could spend my per diem as well. I could save the money for several days amassing a large enough sum to warrant a “big ticket” purchase.

In all of these cases I am choosing to spend the daily money. 

But…

What if each day, I used the $864 to generate additional money?  Let’s say I found a way to turn my daily $864 into $950 (10%).  I might not have the items I could buy with the money, but I would have more money stored up.  In this case I am choosing to invest the daily money.

With the first scenario, at the end of a week I have “stuff” but no money.  In the second scenario, I may not have any stuff at the end of the week but, I have over $8800.  This is previously accrued money plus each day’s money plus10%.  Each passing day I can continue to grow my investment as long as I live.

With that kind of investment I am in a position to both continue to invest and spend a little on the things I need and want.

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