Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

On Blogging Hold While Living in Nineveh

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Hey folks–I know my blogging has been erratic of late, but it is with pretty good reason. There are seasons of church life in which both great joys and great needs conspire to create great ministry demands. We’re in such a season–and I don’t forsee it ending soon.

As I prayerfully watch over the flock entrusted to TFC’s pastoral team it’s clear to me that these next 6-12 months are going to be filled with intense labor. Marriages and familes need much help. The teaching diet of the church needs constant watchcare. Some folks are dabbling in errors with one degree of gravity or another. Others are stuck in resentments and fears and sin patterns. While we have many fine men and teenaged boys, there is a great need to light a fire of godly ambition under many of them–and this is going to take concerted effort.

Besides: I live in Nineveh.

Recently I heard that Toms River (with perhaps a couple of neighboring towns thrown in) is populated by 125,000 people, 123,000 of which make no profession of faith in Jesus Christ alone as Savior. God reminded me last evening that that 123, 000 number is biblically familiar: something like it is found in Jonah 4:11. God had pity on Nineveh and sent them a powerful witness because 120,000+ people there had no spiritual clue.

I live in Nineveh, and Nineveh calls. And along with all the pastoral callings I’ve cited above, I’ve got to do more to answer this one. I’ve been pleading with God in recent years for an ever-increasing burden for the pitiful state of the lost and for the glorious fame of Christ. He’s answering that prayer, and I must now act with ever-increasing zeal.

All this is to say that my blogging is going to be greatly reduced for the foreseeable future. I hope to do one per week this fall, one connected to TFC’s RMMR reading schedule through the Old Testament, providing once a week devotional reflections on a reading for that week. But beyond that it’ll be mostly silent for now.

In the meantime I remind you that you live in Nineveh too. We need more Jonahs.

Only make sure that your Jonah ministry has a bit more enthusiasm than his did!

Satisfied with the God Who Strengthens Me

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

God gives strength to the trusting weary in his time through Christ according to their need to do the remarkable.

My main point in my Friday PM message to the youth camp crowd.

See if you can see it from my text: Isaiah 40:28-31.

Pray that you can live it today.

Grace and peace.

Tim S.

A Lord’s Day Enjoyed

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

Just a note to let you know that God met with his people in TFC this morning: stirring songs, heartfelt prayer, rich communion around the table, the opportunity to give freely from that which has been given to us, and Scott S’ great Word from God about God.

“We embrace not only the Word of God but the God of the Word.” That statement from Scott about said it all.

Two hours with God’s people: better than two years or decades anywhere else.

Simply true.

Kind Words and Carrying Strength

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

I’m back!

First let me thank those who replied to my earlier query regarding the blog and included some very kind words in the process. It was much appreciated and encouraging. Such kind words are strength to the often uncertain and sometimes weary!

Speaking of strength to the weary, I am amazed, as I shared Sunday in the dearest place on earth, how God carried Gayline and me through the past couple of weeks. In a 10-11 day stretch we logged:

  • 1, 000+ miles of driving
  • 15 speaking times for me; 3 for Gayline
  • 20+ hours preparing talks
  • 10+ hours counseling/encouraging 4 pastors and their wives
  • dozens of additional hours in conversation/counseling/interacting with various folks

And here we are: safe, sound, and still strong by grace! We felt quite literally carried by grace. And you all helped us by your prayers (2 Corinthians 1:11).

I was thinking this morning of the sustaining grace of God. I drove to my office realizing that I was anxious to get there! God has called me to serve as a pastor–thus far for 28+ years–and I still love it, look forward to it, enjoy it, and feel strong in it. Is that grace or what?!

This is Isaiah 40:28-31 proven. He gives strength to the weary so that they are able to run and not be weary, to walk and not faint. As I preached recently: God gives strength to the trusting weary in His time, through Christ, according to their need, to do the remarkable.

And everyone who has been a Christian for longer than three minutes is proof of it!

 

 

Thanks–and a Few Words before I Head Out of Town

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Thanks to those who responded to my last post–giving me just enough encouragement to continue this blogging work into the future. I’ve always believed there to be value in this; I’ve just not always been sure others felt the same. Your words have encouraged me to keep going.

I am about to head out of town for about 8 days of rather intense ministry opportunity. Ten messages in three New England locations in eight days, with counseling and care for dozens of teens and a couple of  pastors added in throughout.

Studies have shown that New England is now the most secular part of our country. It is the least churched region in America today.

But God is at work. In North Attleboro, Mass. and just north, are two good, growing churches where Christ is loved, the gospel is preached, and rich and sound doctrine is procaimed by pastors who love and live the truth with passion. Just north of Boston is another.

In Greene, Maine, there is a fine little church pastored by a young man with a passion for Christ and the gospel, who has a desire to become a part of something bigger than his little work: he wants to get into our family of churches, Sovereign Grace Ministries.

At the recent Together for the Gospel conference I met dozens of men who were leading churches throughout New England, taking them further up and further into the riches of grace.

So my labors over this next couple of weeks are but tiny drops in a bucket of heroic labors going on in a dry and barren region. God is at work through good and godly folks who are not counting their lives dear to themselves that they might run the race and finish the course laid out for them.

Pray for New England. Pray for America. Pray for revival–a true, deep, and profound work of the Spirit that will lead to the conversion of millions and the transformation of countless lives. It’s happened before; it can happen again.

Where Have I Been–or Have You Even Noticed I’ve Been Away?

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

Hello all. Sorry for my recent absence but life has been full and I’ve just not been able to get to this. As it is, with summer ministry events coming up, it’ll be a good two weeks before I can even think about returning to my blogging ways.

Here’s a question for you: since we have no real accurate way of tracking who or how many are reading FreeTruth, would you do me a favor? Would you please simply click on “Comments” and type “I do” to indicate whether you read the blog and would like it to continue. There have been so few responses of late that I need to guage the readership to discern the value of continuing…

Let me know friends!

Thanks.

Resolved: To Make Every Word Count for God’s Glory and My Eternal Reward (2)

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Following up yesterday’s post with a concluding section I offer the following resolutions as worthy of consideration for us all. They have given me much direction in my own (very imperfect, but growing) walk with Christ and relationships with others. Let me know what you think.

6.Resolved: Never to misuse the name of my God, or that of His Son , Jesus. The name is too precious, its beauty too dear, to ever escape my lips with anything but an anointing of wonder, love, and joy upon it. This self-control will extend even to popular sound-a-like substitutes for the name of God or Christ, lest I weaken my resolve to cherish the Name, or sound to others as if I have.

7.  Resolved: Never to profane  anything that is holy–be it God’s Name or Throne or Wrath or Word or Truth, or even His sacred gifts of marriage and sex (through careless words or vulgar expressions or crude terms or flippant reference). All these are to be referenced with nothing but wonder and gratitude (Ephesian 5:3, 4), never with careless word or crude expression.

8. Resolved: Never to “damn” anything or anyone until that Day when God permits me to judge men and angels in His presence (1 Corinthians 6:3). I recognize that when I damn another I am assuming a prerogative only God has the right to exercise or delegate. Consequentlyto damn another or to wish harm on any person (the essence of cursing) this side of Judgment Day, is to be guilty of the great sins of arrogance and self-worship.

9. Resolved: Never to speak of “hell” except when referring to the real thing, and then only with tears and trembling in my heart–for it is the place of unspeakable sorrows into which, headlong, countless souls are rushing . By any other use of the word hell I risk trivializing the terrifying, and desensitizing both my heart and others’ to the horrors that await.

10. Resolved: To speak only the truth, but also to speak only the truth sufficiently. I must speak only what is true. But my truth speaking must also provide all the truth that any may need to hear, and in a manner suited to the urgency, the seriousness, and the joy that that truth demands, and that person may need. To speak some truth when more truth is needed is cowardice or defective love. To speak truth without a degree of joy or seriousness or urgency or even righteous anger corresponding to that truth, is to obscure truth, and in reality not to speak the truth adequately at all.

11. Resolved: Never to yell in sinful anger or indulge any outburst of anger against any person. As a matter of biblical principle I recognize that outbursts and yelling are sin (Ephesians 4:31) and cannot be excused for any reason.

12. Resolved: Never to speak of myself–my works or actions or achievements or gifts–except if there be sure and certain evidence that it would serve the growth of others. Taking Proverbs 27:2 seriously I will seek to call no attention to myself except what I believe will bring glory to God and good to others.

Dependant on grace  both to forgive my many sins of the tongue and to enable fewer of them, I hereby resolve to master the tongue for the glory of God.

Will you join me?

Thugs and Thieves in High Places: A Final Word (Psalm 37)

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

As I close out this series the news stays bad: a Supreme court appointee with an undoubted radical left agenda, bailouts of other countries that can only spell further disaster for our own, oil gushing up into the Gulf bringing with it wildlife sorrows and even worse, fuel for environmentalists’ rhetoric (most of whom scream more loudly for the little fishies of the sea than for the little babies in the womb), Time Square bomb plots (foiled not by security skill, but only by providential mercy), immigration battles that seem strangely lacking in both wisdom and compassion–when solutions are available if only leaders had guts and compassion enough to implement them, and an arrogant President and set of leaders that simply demonstrate no fear of God in anything they do. And on fronts closer to home–neighbors, family members, and friends all continue to choose sin over holiness, garbage over purity, the way of the flesh over the way of God.

In times like these Psalm 37:1-40 remains a good go-to scripture. As we take one last look at this Psalm in which we receive divine guidance for living when thugs and thieves rule, it’s enlightening to note that one of the core commitments we need to make is to simple obedience to God’s Law. Psalm 37:34 exhorts that we “keep his way”. Psalm 37:37 reminds us to observe the blameless and upright, with an implicit challenge to imitate their ways.

In times like these what each of us needs to be and what the world needs to see, is a Christian who lives a simple, straightforward, consistent life of obedience to God, come what may. Thugs and thieves above and around us are not going to pay us any mind when we decry their violation of God’s Law, while all the while we’re consistently and willfully violating it ourselves. Friends, we hear far to little about (and we see even less of) obedience these days. Christians are so obsessively concerned to avoid sounding the least bit legalistic that they are paranoid about proclaiming Law of God, and our call to obey it.

Today’s world needs some radically obedient Christians. Men and women who do what they’re told by God because they have a passion for the holy honor of God. Gutsy, humble, bondslave, do-as-I’m-told obedience is out of fashion, having been replaced by warm and fuzzy ideas about simply “loving God and wanting to be so close to him that I naturally do what he likes.”

Don’t get me wrong: obedience done grudgingly or obedience done in an attempt either to gain or maintain God’s favor is a denial of the gospel and an undermining of the grace of God in Christ. But any notion of Christian faith that does not include a robust commitment to obedience is simply biblically defective. A recent conversation about these matters led me to write the following:

No one believes more firmly and joyfully in the free grace of the gospel than I do, but if by free grace one means that there is no need for moral transformation than I would disagree. And if one thinks that such transformation can come about without a serious commitment to obedience then I disagree. If one wants a faith without Divine law or moral imperatives or consistent spiritual disciplines or rigorous self-denial or sin mortification or strenuous work or pastoral authority or church accountability than one will have to look elsewhere than in the NT. For no such faith exists in the pages of the Scripture.

If you want faith without works, grace without work, holiness without effort, love without obedience, godliness without sweat and tears, strength without exercise and diet, victory over sin without hand-to-hand combat to the death with sin, and/or maturity of character without strenuous self-discipline with endurance over the long haul, then you want something other than New Testament faith. What you want is not biblical Christianity, but spiritual hocus-pocus; a magical sin-disappearing act  for the soul.

Christian friend, we have no hope of being light in a dark world unless we are living lives of consistent, principled, deliberate, love-motivated, sweat and tears obedience. Thugs and thieves will mock our righteous indignation over their despising of God’s Law as sheer hypocrisy if we don’t live our own lives under God’s Law, and they’d be right.

It’s shocking: there’s something about hearing indignation from cursing, lusting, lazy, time-stealing, Bible ignoring, God’s name-taking-in-vain, trash-watching, parents-dishonoring, and gossiping, slandering, coveting “Christians” that sounds just a little bit hollow in the world’s ears. Go figure.

Preparing to Preach on the Omniscience of God

Friday, May 7th, 2010

I’ve had a massive head cold all week and need today somehow to work through the fogginess of head discomfort and near debilitating pain to prepare to preach this Sunday.

My topic is based in Isaiah 40:12-14–the absolute omniscience of God. God simply knows all that is or was or ever will be. He also knows all that might have been or could be. There are no actualities in human history…nor have there been any possibilities in human history (past, present or future) which God does not know.

His knowledge is complete and unlearned. Now that’s a truth massive and profound enough to give you a headache–and I already have one!

That’s okay: God who knows all knows my headache right now!

My prayer is that as I meet God in my study, I will be so filled with the wonder of who God is that I will be able communicate the God I have met, this Sunday morning. Please pray for me that having met God I will herald his glory as if fitting.

Sovereign eternal omniscient God: I would see you today in such a way that when I stand before your people this Lord’s Day, there might be some reflection of your glory on my face and in my every word.

A Conference, and My Blog Schedule for This Week

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

This week I get to go to a conference in Louisville, KY., with 7, 000 pastors and Christian leaders. The Together for the Gospel speaking team includes: C.J. Manahey, R.C. Sproul, John Piper, Mark Dever, John MacArthur, Ligon Duncan, Al Mohler and more.

Needless to say this a privilege to attend and I am grateful for a church family that applauds the value of such opportuities for me, and frees me to go. Thanks all for making it possible! I believe you all will feel the effects of this week for years to come as I continue to try to serve you. What I receive you will receive in one form or another.

And thanks to the team back here at home who carry on the work so effectively while I’m away. I love and thank God for you all!

As for the blog, I’ve got a post in our current series all ready to go for you tomorrow and Thursday. The other days I might (emphasis on might) offer an update from the conference. Then again I might not. We’ll see!

May grace flow to all of you, with more joy than you know what to do with!
Tim