The good, the bad, the beautiful

The good, the bad, the beautiful

The good, the bad, the…………….beautiful?  Not exactly a raucous sounding Clint Eastwood movie is it?  But it is a picture of the church found in Acts 4:32 through 5:14, the recounting of Ananias and Sapphira.  The good in that all who had need in the church were finding that need met through other members of this body.  Especially well pictured for us in the person of Barnabas.  The bad in the sin of Ananias and Sapphira.  Not the sin of greed, as supposed by many, but the sin of spiritual deception as posed by these two believers to the church and ultimately to God. So where is the beautiful?  Doesn’t this story end with the immediate deaths of this husband and wife team?  ‘Falling down and breathing their last’ seems more like a violent ending to a Clint Eastwood movie of the old west than a conclusion to a church service in the first century.   But the story really doesn’t end there, for Luke continues in verse 14 with the fact that ‘more than ever believers were added to the Lord, multitudes of both men and women’.  Isn’t it interesting that the Holy Spirit recorded for us that the fastest growth spurt of all time for the church followed on the heals of such a traumatic event? I realize that the scriptures place this verse in the midst of a passage that records ‘many signs and wonders being performed by the apostles’, and this could explain the great growth of the church.  But the scriptures also places it immediately after God’s judgment upon sin in His church.  Verse 13 says that ‘none of the rest dared join them’ but that the people held them in high esteem.  Why did the unbelievers not dare join them?  It was because they saw that this body of believers not only demonstrated the love of Christ toward each other in meeting physical needs but also took sin in their midst very seriously.  Here is the beautiful in this story. God takes sin seriously in His bride, the church.  It is His purpose to present us holy and blameless before the Father and will go to great lengths to ensure her holiness.  It is a beautiful thing when the church functions properly in holiness and unity as the Psalmist says, ‘how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity!’ It is apparent that God doesn’t always discipline His children’s spiritual deception as severely as He did Ananias and Sapphira, or as Donald Barnhouse said, ‘each church would need a morgue in it’s basement and a mortician on Pastoral staff’.  But the lesson for today’s church and it’s members is that we need to judge ourselves of personal spiritual deception. Do we pretend a righteousness we don’t possess?  Do we try and persuade others that we are great prayer warriors when we know that prayer is simply used at meals and bedtime.  Do we lead others to believe that we have it all together spiritually when we know that we are spiritual wrecks?  Ananias and Sapphira’s sin was not a casual misrepresentation but a willful falsity seeking to lead the church to believe they possessed a deeper spirituality than truly existed in their lives.  Today’s church must rid itself of deception among it’s members and live transparent before God and each other.  As Paul says in Ephesians ‘having put away falsehood, let each one of you speak the truth with his neighbor, for we are members one of another.’ Let this year be one in which we as the church speak the truth in love to each other.  For judgment should begin at the household of God.  It is time for the evangelical church to become so distinctly different than the rest of the world that we give people something to convert to.  Let that distinction begin with our truthfulness to one another. soli deo gloria

It’s Christmas Eve

It’s Christmas Eve

Today is Christmas Eve.  The big crescendo is about to reach it’s pinnacle.  With great anticipation, children and many adults will fall asleep tonight wondering what the mystery and marvel of tomorrow will bring.  What will it bring for you?  Presents, fixed family relationships, good will, peace? As we end the Advent Season tonight with a candlelight service at Center Hill, the question will be asked, Why did Jesus come anyway?  Why would the God of creation manifest Himself in the form of a human to live among us, when we, His creation, had so despicably rejected Him?  Was it simply to spread good will and a general proclamation of peace on earth?  Or an exhortation to give of ourselves to those in need or even to some how be kinder to our neighbor than our past records?  If that is our understanding of the angelic host’s song to the shepherds, than we have missed the true gospel message in this Christmas season. Jesus came to seek and to save the lost, to be a ransom for many.  The proclamation that first Christmas night says “Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased”!  Don’t miss the gospel, the ‘good news’, of the angel’s voices for the well meaning quotes of today’s Christmas cards.   Christ’s coming was only good news to those with whom God is pleased.  The stark reality is that the very need for a ‘savior’ assumes the desperate plight of man.  We are at war and not peace with God.  He has provided a way of reconciliation though His son, Jesus.  Those ‘with whom He is pleased’ are those who have by faith placed their trust and obedience in this Christ child and His finished work on Calvary’s cross, some three decades later. We at Center Hill, trust that you have understood the reason for His coming and not simply ‘the reason for the season’.  May you say this year, that ‘peace is with me, for God is pleased with me’.  God is only pleased with us when we have by faith, trusted and obeyed His son, for reconciliation. Merry Christmas and Peace with God! Soli Deo Gloria

Christmas responses

Christmas responses

How do you respond to the Christmas season? With anticipation, merriment, frustration or maybe even apathy? At CHCC, we have been looking at several different biblical characters and their responses to Christmas or in particular their response to Emmanuel, God with us, over the past couple of weeks. What has become very evident about the responses to the Messiah’s coming, found in the story of the first Christmas, has been that it reflects different attitudes about worship of the God of creation. We have looked at the Magnificat and found that Mary’s response was one of a humble servant who’s soul magnified the Lord. This from a teenager of 14 or 15. King Herod responded with hostility and the Jewish leaders with apathy. Apathy, which by the way, led to open hostility ending in our Savior’s murder three decades later. And this week we saw the joyful worship from the most unlikely persons, Gentile pagans, the Magi.   These astrologer magicians ascribed to our Savior the dignity, honor and worship due Him through joyful giving of their sacrificial gifts. It has been a great opportunity for us to evaluate our own responses to the Christ of Christmas. Have we found ourselves humbly submitting to the leading of a sovereign God in our lives and ‘rejoicing with exceeding great joy’ as we approach to worship the King of Kings. Or do we miss the Messiah even though He’s manifested Himself in our very midst and time. Never let it be said of us, as it was of the Jewish leaders, that we have responded with indifference. When confronted with the truth of the Messiah and the Good News that ‘God is with us’ we are forced to make a decision. Will we worship Him this Christmas or find ourselves missing the Messiah for our celebrating of the season? Soli Deo Gloria

I’m not sure I feel thankful

I’m not sure I feel thankful

Then Jonah prayed to the Lord his God from the belly of the fish, saying, “I called out to the Lord, out of my distress, and he answered me….O Lord my God. When my life was fainting away, I remembered the Lord, and my prayer came to you….But I with the voice of thanksgiving will sacrifice to you;….. Salvation belongs to the Lord! It is so easy to give thanks to God when He pours out all good things upon us, isn’t it?  When life seems to be filled with blessing upon blessing, we raise our voice heavenward and proclaim God’s goodness and our gratitude. But what about the times when the struggles of this world seem to be mounting up?  When the blessings of God are but a memory?  When His voice has grown silent and His presence at a distance?  Do we give thanks then? Seems an odd question and silly proposition.  Give thanks when I’m not thankful for my situation.  Who in the world would be thankful for being in the belly of fish?  But that is exactly what Jonah did.  He prayed with a thankful heart to His Lord even in the midst of uncertain times and near fatal circumstances.  He understood the truth of what Paul would write many generations later, that with ‘thanksgiving’ we are to make our requests known to Him without anxiety (Phil. 4:6,7)  What radical thinking! What did Jonah have to be thankful for?  The same things you and I have in the midst of the darkest night.  God is powerful (Psa 68:28), He watches our very steps (Psa 139:3), He compassionately cares for us (1 Peter 5:7),  and that He is continually in the process of conforming us to His son’s image which is for our good and His glory (Romans 8:28, 29).   Even when our situation would seem to dictate our crying out in hopelessness or at least a pity party, it is then that God’s peace is promised to us as we cry out to him in honesty and thanksgiving. It is good to give thanks to the Lord, for His steadfast love and faithfulness! Sola Deo Gloria

We cannot but speak…..

We cannot but speak…..

These are the words of Peter and John as they stood before many of the same accusers who killed Jesus just weeks earlier.  Rulers and elders of the Jewish community looking for a reason to quiet the witness of these two disciples.  The message of these two men was a threat to the authority and thereby the very existence of the accusing council.  The reason was simple, Peter and John taught in the name of a ‘risen’ Jesus Christ, our Lord.  If He be risen from a grave which they had put Him in, then this proved His claims of being the Messiah, the very Son of God.  He was Lord and had legitimate claim to the worship, honor and allegiance which threatened the ascendancy of this group.  A council which would stop at nothing, including murder, to further their reach for power. Without concern for their own welfare, here stood these two ‘uneducated, common men’ astonishing this powerful group.  How? Scripture give us this reason, they spoke with boldness and everyone recognized that they had been with Jesus.  Wow, what an example for the New Testament church today. Jesus’ last earthly words to His disciples was an admonition to be witnesses for Him.  Here is the first recorded persecution for that witness.  How did they respond and what was their preparation for it.  The book of Acts records it all for us.  Chapter 2 says they devoted themselves to three things, sound doctrine, biblical fellowship with one another and true worship of the Triune God.  It’s interesting that what is not recorded is their devotion to witnessing and evangelism.  Chapter 4 records that evangelism and witness was a natural, unavoidable result of being with Jesus  and reflecting His person and finished work.   It is what happens when we find ourselves so immersed in and so in love with our risen Lord.  We can’t help ‘but speak of the things we have seen and heard’.  If they had devoted themselves to proclaiming something or someone whom they did not know intimately they would have become a poor witness, which in this writer’s opinion is worse than no witness. Don’t misunderstand me, scripture, through the very words and actions of Jesus Himself, teaches us of a needed compassion and passion for evangelism of the lost.  However,  it becomes the natural outgrowth of spiritual maturation in our experience, knowledge and understanding of God’s grace towards us, sinners undeserving of any favor.  It is when we find ourselves not only saved by the grace of God at the cross of Christ but sustained in our daily walk by that same grace, that we jump for joy as the beggar standing beside Peter and John at their inquisition. ( Read the story for yourself in Acts 3 and 4.) Let us commit ourselves to sound doctrine, biblical fellowship and proper worship and then proclaim with the apostles, “we can but speak of the things we have seen and heard”. O for a thousand tongues to sing My great Redeemer’s praise, The glories of my God and King, The triumphs of His grace! Hear Him, ye deaf; His praise, ye dumb, Your loosened tongues employ; Ye blind, behold your Savior come, And leap, ye lame, for joy. Jesus! the name that charms our fears, That bids our sorrows cease; ’Tis music in the sinner’s ears, ’Tis life, and health, and peace. He breaks the power of canceled sin, He sets the prisoner free; His blood can make the foulest clean, His blood availed for me. soli deo gloria

It is good to give thanks to the Lord

It is good to give thanks to the Lord

…so says the Psalms.  Center Hill had it’s annual Thanksgiving dinner in the church fellowship room this past Sunday.  It was a great reminder for us to give thanks to the Lord for His blessing of the past year.  We used every table the church had to seat everyone.  For that we are thankful. Even though we are not driven by numbers at Center Hill, God has increased us numerically and for that we are grateful.  But mostly we give thanks to Him for growth and discipleship in the individual lives of the members of CHCC.  God is bringing about change in each of us, constantly conforming us to His image, through the daily struggles and blessings of life.  It has been encouraging to see folks at Center Hill align their responses to the ‘heat’ of life to the standards of God’s Word.  For that we are eternally thankful to our faithful Lord. Soli Deo Gloria

5 days to seminar

5 days to seminar

As I noted last month on a blog, Dr. George Scipione, from the Biblical Counseling Institute of Pgh. will be conducting an afternoon and evening seminar this coming Saturday challenging the contemporary church to counsel itself using the Word of God as it’s authority.  It will be a most instructive and encouraging evening.  The seminar is being hosted by our friends at the First Baptist Church of Clarion, Pastor Keith Richardson. Click for information Fall Bible Conference – Are YOU Competent to Counsel? Plan to attend, nothing is more important to the Church than this issue.

Great grace was upon them

Great grace was upon them

Picture the first century church with me  “…..they received… with glad and generous hearts”,”…. and having favor with all the people”,”….. great grace was upon them all”,”….when he came and saw the grace of God, he was glad.”  This all according to the book of Acts. Picture the 21st century church with me “…..they received…with glad and generous hearts”,”….and having favor with all the people”,”…..great grace was upon them all”,”….when he came and saw the grace of God, he was glad.”  This all according to the experience of this Pastor. The month of October has been Pastor Appreciation month, not sure what official body of authority established this or how it is to be observed but our local church and the church at large has surely shown it’s appreciation for this  Pastor.  CHCC honored us with a gift of a large hand made quilt featuring a stitching of the church and the name of each member.   What a treasure!  It will proudly (I mean proudly in a ‘Christian’ sense) be displayed in our new house.  It truly is a heart felt gift both given and received. The church at large has displayed grace, generosity, and love to us in our recent move from one house to another.  What a wonderful example of Christ likeness is the body of Christ  as it finds itself both recipients and givers of ‘great grace’.   We often compare ourselves as the contemporary church to the first century church, mostly in a negative light.  And at times we do fall short in areas of discernment, depth of doctrinal understanding, and commitment to proper worship of a Holy God. But when it comes to showing grace within the body of Christ  Center Hill and our friends at First Baptist of Clarion, First Baptist of New Bethlehem and Zion Baptist excel.  This has been proven time and time again over the past years as the Body has risen to extend favor where favor is not deserved and certainly not earned, the very meaning of grace.   What a privilege to be a part of the church today.  Thank you Center Hill and friends for being Christ to my family and me. soli deo gloria

Upcoming Seminar

Upcoming Seminar

At CHCC, we have been using the Biblical based book “How People Change”, to gain insight into our natural condition in a fallen world and how God is in the process of transforming us into proper image bearers of Himself in all situations of life.  It has been a great study.  I am excited to announce that there will be a Bible Conference featuring Dr. George C. Scipione of the RPTS Biblical Counseling Institute of Pgh. on November 7th and 8th.  This seminar will re-enforce what we have learned from God’s Word over the past several months, that we are in constant transformation and God’s Word addresses the “Heat” in our lives and our involvement in counseling of Christian brothers and sisters. The conference is being hosted by the First Baptist Church of Clarion, at the corner of Main and 7th streets in Clarion.  There is no charge for the Saturday evening seminar and dinner is included.  There is also a brunch being held earlier on Saturday for Pastors/Elders/Leaders. Check out the link below for further information and conference details.  I can’t encourage you enough, if you are in driving distance, to attend this seminar.  The church needs to get back to counseling one another through God’s Word.  Join us on November 7th and 8th. Fall Bible Conference – Are YOU Competent to Counsel?

Baby/Parent Dedication

Baby/Parent Dedication

What a great day we had at Center Hill on Sunday.   We had a dedication of two new babies and their parents to bring them up in the knowledge and grace of our Lord.  At Center Hill we rejoice in the fact that God blesses families with children ( Psalm 127:3)!  He blesses churches with the responsibility to encourage and instruct the family to bring up a child in the way he should go.  We as a local congregation have the solemn duty to come along side our young families and by using our gifts, wisdom and experience assist them in their vows to raise Godly children. We as a congregation do not take that responsibility lightly.  Just as the parents of Lilly Reagan and Nicolai Britton made vows to seek God’s blessing and guidance for their children, our congregation made vows to love and support these families as they fulfill their promise.  What a great day! Nicolai and Nadine Britton                                                          Ron, Joni and baby Lilly Reagan You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might.  And these words which I am commanding you today shall be on your heart. And you shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise up. (Deuteronomy 6:5-7)