Messages for the Moment presented by Rev. E. Anderson

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Rev. E. Anderson

Send Picture First
by Jon Walker

“So we have stopped evaluating others by what the world thinks about them. Once I mistakenly thought of Christ that way, as though he were merely a human being. How differently I think about him now!” (2 Corinthians 5:16 NLT)

“Send picture first, then I’ll reply” – It’s a pretty common message in the personal ads, and in this age of alienation and e-community, it makes a lot of sense to exercise care and caution in any relationship with a new person.

But let me ask this question: When it comes to real love – real as opposed to some fantasy-romantic love – do you find yourself saying, “Send picture first?”

We may say it in different ways. For instance, we may say, think, or judge: “I have to see if you’re good enough.” “I’m not sure you’re worthy of my love.” “You need to act the way I expect before I’ll love you.

And we don’t do that just with strangers who cross our path. We often make these judgments about the people closest to us, our loved ones.

In our walk with Christ, the apostle Paul instructs us to stop judging people according to the flesh (2 Corinthians 5), which is a King Jamesion way of saying “Don’t judge a book by its cover or people by appearances.” To paraphrase Paul: “We don’t evaluate people by what they have or how they look. We looked at the Messiah that way once and got it all wrong, as you know. We certainly don’t look at him that way anymore. Now we look inside, and what we see is that anyone united with the Messiah gets a fresh start, is created new ….” (2 Corinthians 5:16b-17a MSG)

Now, let me ask you a pointed question, one I’m also asking myself today: When it comes to loving God, do you find yourself saying, “Send picture first?”

My own answer to that is “Ouch!”

Yet, God in his grace did send a picture first – the picture of Jesus, his body broken and stretched out on the cross, dying for your sins. Even as we had yet to send our picture, God sent his picture first. That’s my paraphrase of Romans 5:8 – “But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” (NIV)

The thing is, while we’re actively engaged in a passive love – saying, “You send your picture first” – God already is setting a place for you at the banquet table. We’re sticking a toe in the water to see if it is warm enough to risk rejection. Yet God in his grace invites us to the wedding feast, where we are guaranteed to be accepted among his beloved.

What does this mean? 

    ·  God takes the initiative – God is reaching out to you, and he’s already provided the means for you to come into a close, lasting relationship with him. The king invites us to a wedding feast in honor of his Son! (Matthew 22)

    ·  What pictures are you sending? – When you are timid or uncertain in seeking or responding to God, you are passively saying, “You go first, God. Send me a picture of what this looks like before I decide if I’m going to do it.” Are you sending God pictures of disobedience, faithlessness, lukewarm attitudes, a refusal to accept his grace? “But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” (Romans 5:8 NIV)

What does God look like? – Here’s one likeness of him: “This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us ….” (1 John 3:16a NIV)

Wisdom’s Way compiled by Rev. A. Linford

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Rev. A Linford, before his decease, was recognized as a good, great and interesting Bible teacher in the Assemblies of God Fellowship for many years. He was a well-loved Bible College lecturer and writer that bequeathed a tremendous amount of Biblical material in his generation. What a legacy he has left to be researched and brought forth to refresh our day! We shall be using such on this site: His writings from the book of Proverbs and also his Editorials that he wrote for the Redemption Tidings when he was its editor. I trust you will enjoy and appreciate his inspired teaching. 

FAITH PLUS

by the late Rev. A. Linford 

Simply to believe is not enough. Peter said so. His words are: “Add to your faith - ” (2 Peter 1:5). And the word used speaks of lavish supply, the picture being that of a banquet where course after course is brought out to make the meal an epicure’s dream. Make your life a banquet - for God. 

Faith is first, for faith is basic. This faith has brought justification, a new standing with God; this faith has produced regeneration, a new beginning with God. We commence our Christian life by an act of commitment; we continue it in an attitude of consecration. 

But to faith must be added “resolution” (Moffatt), the courage to maintain it against opposition and to proclaim it with conviction. Then must be furnished knowledge an intelligent grasp of the Scriptures and a personal experience of spiritual things to reinforce our determina­tion, Then comes temperance, that control of our thoughts, appetites and passions that brings our whole nature into subjection to Christ. Then we must have patience: not that passive virtue which merely waits, but an active endurance of hardship, a persistence of will, a fortitude of mind that never gives in. To this must be added godliness, a deep reverence for the things of the Spirit that sanctifies all we do, a piety that pervades the whole life. After this comes brotherly kindness, a fellow-feeling for our brothers and sisters in Christ that eventually God is love’. 

What a picture Peter gives us of an abundant entrance into the Kingdom. like a cargo-laden ship coming into the harbour to the cheers of waiting crowds. Far better than coming in like a crippled, leaking, battered hulk just making the jetty by jettisoning all its goods. 

All this requires diligence - eager, zealous, earnest diligence. To attain to such fullness of Christian excellence demands that we devote ourselves absorbingly ‘ to this’ task - the task of adding to our spiritual wealth. A full Christian life is possible: but we must take pains to enjoy it. 

Calling and election are not one-sided acts of God they have as an important element our response and out effort. We must “exert ourselves to clinch God’s choice and calling” (N.E.B.), or, as Today’s English Version has it, ‘Try even harder to make God’s call and his choice of you a permanent experience; for if you do so you will never fall away’. Election must be endorsed by action, and calling endorsed by character. By adding these virtues we become strong as a well-rooted tree and secure as a well-anchored vessel.