Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Be Thankful

Be Thankful
 
Dear Champions,
 
The short excerpt was sent to me and is by an unknown author and the Scripture is Colossians 3:15 Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were called to peace. And be thankful. 
 
A young man was getting ready to graduate from college.  For a long time he had admired a beautiful sports car in a dealers showroom and knowing his father could well afford it, he told his Dad that was all he wanted. As his graduation day approached the young man began looking for signs that his father had bought the car.  Finally on the morning of his graduation, his father called him into his study and told him how proud he was to have such a fine son and he told him how much he loved him.

He handed his son a beautifully wrapped gift box. Curious, but somewhat disappointed, the young man opened the box and found a lovely leather bound Bible with the young man s name embossed in gold.  Angry, he raised his voice to his father and said, With all your money you give me a Bible? and then he stormed out of the house, leaving the Bible.

Many years passed and the young man received a telegram telling him that his father had passed away and had willed all his possessions to his son so he needed to come home and take care of things. When he arrived at his father s house sadness and regret filled his heart. He began sorting through his fathers papers and saw the still new Bible just as he had left it years ago.  With tears in his eyes he opened the Bible and began to turn the pages and a car key dropped from the back of the Bible. It had a tag with the dealers name and on the tag was the date of his graduation and the words paid in full.
 
Let us pray for a grateful and thankful heart and receive the gift that our sins are paid for in full by Jesus.
 
Have a great week!-David Vining
 

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Deadly Silence

Deadly Silence
 
Dear Champions,
 
The short excerpt is by Ron Hutchcraft, and the Scripture is Romans 10:14-15 How, then, can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them?

Jack Phillips was a senior radioman on the maiden voyage of the ill-fated Titanic. On that fatal night when two-thirds of her passengers and crew would die, Phillips received a message from a ship called the Masaba. That ship was reporting a major ice field ahead and the message gave the coordinates where the Titanic could expect to encounter those icebergs. It was the place where just two hours later, the Titanic would, in fact, hit one of those icebergs; the one that would sink what was supposed to be the unsinkable ship. The message with the warning of what was ahead - would you believe it – did not get delivered. Jack Phillips was really busy at the time, and he stuck the message on a spindle to be delivered sometime later, and it never was. That one decision would cost the lives of 1,500 people and the life of the radioman himself.

Life-saving information never delivered. That is a tragedy that has been repeated countless times, as followers of Jesus Christ fail to deliver the life-saving message God has given to them. The message of how His Son s death on the cross paid the penalty for our sin and made the way for our sin to be forgiven for us to go to heaven. But if those who know it never tell those who do not know it, lives will be lost forever. That is the deadly silence.

If you belong to Jesus, you may not fully realize the reason you are where you are and the incredibly important role you play in the plans of God and the eternal destiny of the people you know. God has positioned you where you are so you can help save the lives of the people there by pointing them to Jesus; the only one who can save them.  It is a risk to tell them how they can be cured of the cancer of sin and how they can live forever, and you will not take that risk if you are thinking about yourself. You will take the risk if you realize that the greatest risk of all is that they will die without the information that could have helped them go to heaven with you. We cannot be this close to them for so long and never tell them the life-saving information we know.

Champions, have a great week!-David Vining

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Thy Will Be Done

Thy Will Be Done
 
Dear Champions,
 
The short excerpt is by Tim Keller, and the Scripture is Mark 14:36 Abba, Father, Jesus said, everything is possible for you. Take this cup from me. Yet not what I will, but what you will.
 
To pray Thy Will Be Done is to say, I owe you my submission and my allegiance whether I understand it or not, is the greatest opportunity for growth that you can possibly have.  If the essence of sin is not breaking the rules but it is making certain things too important to us, then the only way that you are going to get freedom from that is if God crosses your will and keeps something from you that is very important to you.  What if money is way too important to you?  You are probably not going to know it and as long as you have money you will be in a state of spiritual weakness.  You will be dependent on money for your significance and for your security instead of on God.  In other words, if you have your will when it comes to money, you are in a state of weakness, and you do not even know it.  Only when He crosses your will in an area like that will you start to get free.  Don t you want to be in a position where stuff and circumstances do not bother you, where nothing really gets you down, scares you, or angers you?  How would you get into that situation of freedom?  It will happen only when God crosses your will at so many places where you are too dependent on something, and you learn to say, My real riches are in Jesus.
 
Champions, have a great week!-David Vining

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

God Uses Our Pain

God Uses Our Pain
 
Dear Champions,
 
The short excerpt is by Tony Evans, and it can be found in Joe Gibbs book Game Plan for Life, and the Scripture is found in 2 Corinthians 1:3-4 Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves have received from God.
 
Maybe a huge mistake taught you a lesson you might never have learned otherwise.  Though God never authorizes sin, and sin carries consequences, He still uses our failures to help fulfill His purpose for us.
 
It was Moses the murderer whom God used to lead Israel out of Egypt.  It was David the adulterer whom God used to write many of the psalms, and it was the same Peter who publicly denied Christ that God used to help found the early church.  The key is that these men repented of their sins, turned back to the Lord, and began to follow Him obediently.
 
God also uses those negative experiences that were not our fault.  Maybe a tragedy in your life has helped mold you into a compassionate counselor.  Maybe you grew up fatherless, or were discriminated against racially, or were treated unfairly on the job.  Those experiences, painful as they are, can shape you into a sensitive, caring person.
 
The story of Joseph is a classic illustration of how God can redeem the ugly events in our lives.  Joseph was rejected by his jealous brothers and left for dead in a pit; he was sold as a slave, unjustly accused of rape, and forgotten in prison.  But the Bible is clear that, each step of the way, the Lord was with Joseph.  God used all the negatives realities in his life to direct him to his destiny.  Joseph would become second in command in Egypt and be used by God not only to save the life of his family, but also to help fulfill God s purpose of founding a nation.
 
God knows how to take your good, your bad, and your ugly and use them for His purpose in your life.
 
Champions, have a great week!-David Vining

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

The Great Paradox

 The Great Paradox
Dear Champions,

The short excerpt is by Chuck Colson and is found in Joe Gibbs book Game Plan for Life.  Early in his career Colson was special counsel to President Richard Nixon, and he served prison time for obstruction of justice related to the Watergate scandal.  Colson founded Prison Fellowship Ministries after he was released from prison, and the Scripture is Luke 9:23-23 Then Jesus said to them all: If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will save it.
     
Looking back, I can now see clearly the two great lessons from my life.  The first was the paradox I discovered in prison: If you really want to find your life, you have to lose it for Christ s sake.  After years of success and power, clawing my way to the top, I ended up empty and desperate.  But when I surrendered my life to Christ, I found it in prison, real peace, joy and purpose.

The second great lesson is also a paradox. God did not choose to use me when I was at the top.  He used me when I was broken at the bottom.  What I did not understand was that nothing is beyond the power of God.  In fact, God chose me precisely when I was weakest and most broken.  Why? Because then my own pride was out of the way and I could never glory in anything I did in the future. And I have not. God has used my life for His much greater purpose-to spread prison ministries around the world, far beyond anything I could ever dream of.  Indeed, he uses the weak and broken to shame the wise and mighty.

This former Marine captain and powerful White House aide thought he did not need God; the convict washing socks in a prison laundry knew how wrong he was.  The great paradox is that God will use your weakness, not your strength.

Champions, have a great week!-David Vining

Friday, October 9, 2009

Works or Grace?

Works or Grace?
 
Dear Champions,
 
The short excerpt is by Tim Keller, and the Scripture is Ephesians 2:8-9 For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God-- not by works, so that no one can boast.
 
The symptoms of sin are breaking the rules, but the essence of sin is taking a good thing and making it more important than God.  It is taking good things and making them ultimates and living for them and being defined by them.  That is the reason why in the Ten Commandments the first commandment, the primary commandment, is to have no other gods before me.  Everything else, all of the other, the cheating, the lying, the murdering, the stealing, and all of that awful stuff, it all flows out of the first one. 
 
No one is righteous, not even one; no one seeks for God (Romans 3:10).  There are bad people who mug you and cheat and hurt people, and they, of course, are not looking for God.  But here is what is scary about good and religious people.  Good and religious people think that they are looking for God, but they are not. They both are taking things and making them into idols; but some idols lead you to be obedient to the law of God, and some idols lead you to be disobedient to the law of God.  But no one is righteous, not even one; no one is seeking God!  Good people think they are seeking God, but they are seeking a god that they can control through their good works-a god who owes them.  Religious people say, I give God a record of righteousness, and then God owes me a blessing. But a Christian says, God through Jesus Christ has given me a perfect record of righteousness which I receive by faith, and now I live for him.
 
If you are a Christian, grace has come in and grabbed a hold of you and shown you that you can only be saved through the works of Jesus and not your own works.
 
Champions, have a great week!-David Vining
 

Friday, October 2, 2009

Joy in the Midst of Pain

Joy in the Midst of Pain
 
Dear Champions,
 
The short excerpt is from the heart of two moms that were gotten off of the CarePages.  The first is from Katie Dowlen.  Her son, Sam, received a spinal cord injury after his second day of his freshmen year at Tennessee Tech this past August 29th.  The second is by Cindy Landis who lost her precious 12 year old daughter Connor in her fight with cancer this past June of 2009. 
 
From Katie Dowlen:  One of the most precious parts of this whole deal has been the opportunity for us to reconnect with Sam in a way we could not possibly have done otherwise. Is that not just like God? One of those for the good parts that He talks about in Romans 8:28 (We know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.).  Thank you so much for not growing weary in bringing Sam and our family to the feet of Jesus. We see Him everywhere. And in every step of this journey. I continue to pray for Sam s complete healing and recovery. As his mom, I am simply unable to pray for anything less. Yet while I pray for his body to return to what it was before August 29th, I pray his heart and his soul never will. Nor mine. We know that God never wastes pain. And that He uses everything to grow us up into who He has for us to be. Everything.

From Cindy Landis:  God has blessed us through our tragedy. Your love, support, and many acts of kindness have overwhelmed our broken hearts.  My heart has not only been broken though, it has been shattered....shattered into a million pieces that will take time to piece back together. And once it is back together, it will remain forever altered by the chips and cracks that could not be repaired. Perhaps, with time even the remaining rough edges of my mended heart will be smoothed away by the many of hugs and mountains of love poured over and into my wounded spirit. My heart will never be the same but God will enable this abiding heart to help others see the miracle of HIS amazing, unconditional love. The miracle that allows me to see the million and one twinkling stars in the sky and smile because I know Connor is among them....even through the darkness we are experiencing now.

We are sad and sometimes afraid. We are mad and sometimes very angry. Yet our God loves us. He loves us and He knows our pain…. pain that only comes from loving and losing a child. He cries with us. And He knows our despair. And we know it is through our despair by which we have come closer to Him. I have never felt pain so intense, yet I have never felt joy so immense. Pure, inexplicable joy in the midst of pain and grief that could only come from the loving arms of our Lord Jesus. The arms cannot remove the pain but they will give us peace and comfort. They will lift us and mold us into servants of HIS great love. In our pain we seek him more and by doing so we are held a little tighter and lifted a little higher. We thank our God for the pain that has brought us closer to Him.

Jesus said in John 16:33 . . . in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.

Champions, have a great week!-David Vining