Archive for March, 2022

Are You Dying to Live?

ROMANS 6: 1 – 5

Jesus wants to employ the same power by which He was resurrected to awaken the talent, ambition, and joy within you. If you are a Christian the following should excite and challenge you. You have new life in Jesus. It:

GIVES NEW CHARACTER (Vss. 1 – 2)

A caterpillar is in the process of metamorphosis even before it becomes a butterfly.  It changes in nature from a caterpillar to a butterfly inside its outward form before it emerges in all of its new life beauty.

GUARANTEES NEW CONDUCT (Vss. 3, 4)

To illustrate the transition of the old nature to the new, baptism is used.

Literally, baptizo, the Greek word used, is acknowledged by scholars of all faiths to mean literally: to dip, plunge, submerge, or immerse.

Figuratively it means to identify with.

1 Corinthians 10:2 speaks of the followers of Moses and says, “all were baptized into Moses …”  Those who followed Moses were identified with him.

Water baptism is a physical picture depicting a spiritual experience which precedes it.  That spiritual experience is identity with Christ.  Don’t confuse the picture, water baptism, with the reality, trusting of Christ as Savior.

GRANTS NEW CAPACITY (Vs. 5)

In verse 4, “that” introduces a purpose clause.  The purpose of our identity with Christ is that we “should walk in newness of life.” A believer has a new relationship to sin.  Such a one is “dead to sin” (vs. 2) and should not “live any longer in it.”  This means you do not have to live under sin’s controlling influence.

A believer has a new relationship with the Savior.

We share in His resurrected life.  By identifying with Him, we are risen to walk “in newness of life.” Resolve to do it today, then do it one day at the time.

Too many Christians live a life as though they are living between Good Friday and Easter Sunday.  That is, they live a life of despair.  They are not living in the power of His resurrection though they have been redeemed by His death.

Lazarus’s physical resurrection is an illustration of our new life.  He had new life physically.  Christ commanded Him to “come forth.”  He came out bound and Christ said, “Loose him and let him go.”  Christ does not want you bound, but free to love and serve.

Can you imagine Lazarus ever wanting to go back to that grave sight, put on his old grave clothes, and lay in the tomb.  Well, that is how some believers appear to want to live at times. Stay away from your old tomb, that is, old sinful lifestyle.

That is wrong.  Romans 6:5, says “we have been united together…in the likeness of His resurrection.”  “United” means to have been fused together with Him, thus, become one with Him. Such empowers you to walk in newness of life.

A Memorial to the Foundations 5/30/99

“If the foundations are destroyed, What can the righteous do?” Psalm 11:3

Jesus Christ, with His crucifixion imminent, was dining in Bethany when a member of the dinner party anointed His feet with an expensive ointment and wiped them with her hair. The gift of the ointment was expensive but the wiping with her hair was expressive. A woman’s hair is her glory. If you don’t believe it try to interfere with her appointment at the beauty salon.

Jesus said, “Wherever this gospel is preached throughout the whole world, what this woman did will also be spoken of as a memorial to her” (Mark 14: 9).

A memorial is a testimony and tribute to something or someone noteworthy. Go on the Web and look for the heading “Memorial Day” and you will find a variety of headings, such as, Viet Nam Memorial,” “Beirut Memorial,” and a variety of others.

Our nation has a memorial day designated to honor those persons who have given their lives in defense of their country. The origin of the day is obscure. Some say it began on Boalsburg, Pennsylvania, some Columbus, Mississippi, others on Belle Island, in the St. James River, near Richmond, Virginia.

In 1966 the U.S. Government declared Waterloo, New York to have been the birth place of Memorial Day, May 5, 1865.

In his inimitable manner Henry Wordsworth Longfellow wrote of the graves of those killed in battle:
“Your silent tents of green
We deck with fragrant flowers;
Your’s has the suffering been,
The memory shall be ours.”

We have faint memories when it comes to recalling the values and virtues for which our country formerly stood. The Psalmist posed an intriguing question when he asked: “If the foundations are destroyed what can the righteous do?”

I. FOUNDATIONAL CONCEPTS
Unless we remember some of the primary concepts inherent in our culture the culture is in danger of degeneration. Most of the foundational virtues and values upon which our nation was built are now under attack.

WHO WE ARE is under attack. Evolutionary thought that we originated from green slime in a primordial swamp gives not dignity to humankind. The reality you were created in the image of and by a loving God gives dignity and self-worth.

We are told we are nothing but animals. God told us to have dominion over animals.

We are told we are only machines programmed to make automatic responses to external stimuli. The Bible says we were created by God and given a free will.

Methodically the foundations are being destroyed. Revisionist historians are presenting a skewed misrepresentation of our past. Biographers are increasingly hostile to their subjects dredging up any negative and exploiting it. Social scientists stridently assert that human beings are products of their genes and environment.

Secularism professes human beings are self- sufficient and have no need of God.

Many in the art and literary communities repudiate structure, form, and conventional values.

The media creates the impression sleaze is everywhere, that nothing is sacred, that no one is noble, and that there are no heroes. There are 81 TV sets per 100 Americans and the average set is on eight hours a day. Actors, actresses, supermodels, and musicians are no longer simply entertainers. They are treated as philosophers, theologians, deities telling us what values we should have.

Their immoral life style is advocated as the norm. The freedom allowed by cohabitation is to be preferred to the commitment marriage requires. They fail to tell the whole story as revealed by unbiased studies. When a mother and her boy friend live together the child is 33 times more likely to be abused. When the parents are unmarried the child is 20 times more likely to be abused.

If a couple lives together before they marry they are 46 times more likely to divorce than those who live morally.

Living together before marriage is divorce training.

Numerous studies confirm that couples who live together before marriage have a lower level of happiness and well-being than married couples.

The foundation of the church is constantly under attack. Tragedy of tragedy that it is often from within as clergy disgrace their office and abandon sound teaching in search for what the people want.

A leading personality in America wept recently (George Gallop) when he said of his denomination (Episcopal) “We have lost our denomination and can’t get it back. Because of the structure of the denomination it has fallen into the hands of liberal theologians and there is nothing we can do about it.”

That can be said of more than one denomination. It can be said of many churches in all denominations.

Much of the decline in the dynamic of the churches in America has been caused by ministers who don’t teach\preach God’s Word. H. Richard Niebuhr commented the faith of many is weak because: “It preaches that a God without wrath brought man without sin, into a kingdom without judgement through the ministration of a Christ without a cross.”

Materialism has become an effective means of destroying the foundations of righteousness.

Years ago Rousseau expressed it well in explaining the mood of street life in Paris. One of his heros said: “I’m beginning to feel the drunkenness that this agitated, tumultuous life plunges you into. With such a multitude of objects passing before my eyes, I’m getting dizzy. Of all the things that strike me, there is none that holds my heart, yet all of them together disturb my feelings, so that I forget what I am and who I belong to.” (Cox, “Religion in the Secular City”)

What are we to do?

II. FRAUDULENT COUNCIL
The first advice given the Psalmist is: “Flee as a bird to your mountain. For look! The wicked bend their bow, They make ready their arrow on the string, That they may shoot secretly at the upright in heart” (Psalm 11: 1, 2).

Psalm 11: 2 depicts the stealth assault to which believers are subjected.

Their tongue is bent like a bow and their words are “arrows” against the bow string. They seek to replace God’s law and justice with human autonomy and its resultant spiritual anarchy.

Let’s escape. Ignore it. Look the other way. There is nothing you can do about it.

U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonin Scalia made remarkable comments to the Christian Legal Society at the Mississippi School of Law. He said, “Being a Christian means holding values the world will count as foolish.”

Did you notice who said it? A member of the U.S. Supreme Court, Justice Scalia. Did you notice what he said? He didn’t say Christian values are foolish. To the contrary, he thinks they are correct. He said the world will count them as foolish.

Scalia warned that those who believe in the transcendent moral order and power of God that raised Jesus from the dead must be prepared for derision.

Justice Scalia illustrated his point by referring to Sir Thomas More, a noted English author and statesman during the reign of King Henry VIII. When Henry VIII announced he was going to divorce Catherine of Aragon and appoint himself head of an independent Britain Sir Thomas More refused to endorse the acts. He refused to compromise his convictions and resigned his post as Lord Chancellor of England. Henry VIII, a most worldly king, said of More and his Christian convictions, “That’s foolish,” and beheaded Sir Thomas More.

More did not flee he stood by his convictions. Justice Scalia’s critics proved him right about the world calling a person’s Christian convictions foolish. They demanded he resign from the court for holding such views.

III. FAVORABLE CONDUCT
The Psalmist offers three insights.

A. “In the Lord I will put my trust” (Vs. 1).
“The Lord is in His holy temple … His eyes behold the children of men…” (Vs. 4).

Go to the Lord in worship and prayer. He will enable you to gain strength to rebuild the foundations of your life.

A Harvard professor who is a Christian warned his students: “If you do not pray daily, one day you will have to learn how to pray.”

B. “His soul hates him that loves violence” (Vs. 5).

By the time the average American youth reaches the age of 18 he or she has seen over 18,000 acts of violence depicted on TV. Like the drip, drip, drip on a stone it gradually erodes the fabric of our society until it becomes the norm.

There is a stage of adolescent development known as the cognitive stage. In the word cognitive can be heard the word “cog.” Cogs lit together and result in productivity. During this stage of development a person learns to compute according to what they have learned. They learn to put the pieces together, to reason. When they have been fed a diet of violence it seems right. Teens of today are the same as they have been for every era. They tend to think the world focuses on them, what they wear and how they look. They form gangs into which to retreat and hang out. They seek to prove themselves. They fail to see the consequence of their actions. The school is the common ground where all these forces come to play.

Let me illustrate how influential the media is. A little boy in Ethiopia listened to a short wave radio account of an Olympic runner winning his race. That simple single message inspired him to sacrifice everything to become the greatest distance runner in the world and win his gold medal in Atlanta. If Haile Gebrselassie was so inspired by a short wave broadcast what influence is the media having on our youth. If a ten second spot can inspire people to purchase worthless products, then the pervasive violence on TV is having a tremendous impact on 77 million children turning into teenagers.

A corollary to God hating violence is His demand for justice. In his Second Inaugural address President Lincoln said, “The Almighty has His own purposes: ‘Woe unto the world because of offenses! For it must be that offenses come, but woe to that man by whom the offense cometh …. as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, ‘the judgements of the Lord, are true and righteous altogether.’”

Cease to do violence!

C. “The Lord loves righteousness” (Vs. 7).
The starting point is with Jesus Christ.

If the foundations be destroyed what shall the righteous do? They must do what the Lord loves —- righteousness.

What does a basketball player do? He plays basketball.

What does a printer do? He prints.

They do what is inherent in their profession.

The righteous are to do what is becoming of their profession.

I contend we are each living a memorial to our self. Three things reveal our true values.

One is our calendar. Study your calendar and let it tell you what you think of our Lord and righteous deeds. Does your schedule reveal time reserved daily to spend time alone with Him in prayer and Bible study? What does your Sunday calendar reveal regarding your devotion to Him?

A second is your check book. In what are you investing. What support to you give to righteous causes? Is it a “me” centered check book or a Christ centered one revealing spiritual interests?

A third is your Bible. What does it reveal by its wear or lack of wear? Does it show signs of use?

John the disciple of Christ was called “Camel Knees.” His knees supposedly had callouses like those of a camel from kneeling so often in prayer.

Your membership involvement is a memorial to you. In what are you involved? How involved are you in the body of Christ?

Memorial Day is a day to pay tribute to those who gave their lives for us. In the eternal spiritual warfare Christ gave his life for us. What gratitude are you showing? What is your memorial to His victory won at Calvary?

The foundations of any nation can be destroyed. But there is one indestructible foundation on which
life can be built.

“No other foundation can any man lay than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ” (I Corinthians 3: 11).

He can enable a person to live properly on their way to that city which has foundations whose builder and maker is God” (Hebrews 11:10).

Have You Ever Felt Low Down

PSALM 116: 16 – 19

The Psalmist wasn’t merely being poetic when he wrote: “The pains of death encompassed me, And the pangs of Sheol laid hold on me; I found trouble and sorrow.” (Psalm 116: 3)

This was a loyal devotee of the Lord. It is one of many examples of God’s people having problems. In life, a follower of Christ has just as many problems as a non-follower. The difference is to be found in the resources available with which to deal with them.

Have you ever been there?  Most of us have.

The Psalmist said, “I was brought low…, my eyes were full of tears, and my feet were stumbling.” (Vss. 6 & 8).

The Psalmist explained what he did: “Then I called upon the name of the Lord: ‘O Lord, I implore You, deliver my soul!’” (vs. 4)

He asked the Lord to supply his need (Vs. 1) and the Lord graciously did. He has done that for all of us many times. We tend to forget those hours of extremity when the Lord came to our aid. The Psalmist didn’t. As a result he wrote: “I will pay my vows to the Lord.” (Vss. 14 & 18). His vows were:

“I will call upon Him as long as I live.” (Psalm 116: 2c)

Don’t presume on God’s grace or wait for a time of crisis to get acquainted with Him. Cultivate your relationship in time alone with Him in prayer.

“I will Walk before the Lord.” (Psalm 116: 9a)

The term “walk” most often refers to one’s life-style. In that frame of reference the Psalmist is saying, “My lifestyle is going to be one that pleases you.”

Colossians 2:6 says, “As you therefore have received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him.”  How did you receive Jesus? By faith. How are you to walk in Him?  By faith. Do you want to please the Lord? “Without faith it is impossible to please God.” (Hebrews 11:6)

The Biblical word for faith includes in its meaning dependency and reliance. It involves an act of the will. Major Ian Thomas describes a life of faith in what he refers to as the “threefold interlock.” It consists of our love for God, resulting in our dependence upon God, consequencing in our obedience to God.

“I will take the cup of salvation.” (Psalm 116: 13a)

“The cup of salvation” has an interpretation and an application.

The interpretation has its origin in the practice of lifting a cup of praise to the Lord and pouring it out on the sacrifice made on the altar. It was a symbolic act of gratitude performed in anticipation of the coming of the Messiah.  It depicted the giving of self in sacrifice to the Lord. Hence, “Out of gratitude I will completely give myself to the Lord.”

There is an application. This is a reference to accepting whatever circumstance comes.

During the developing years of California, a miner was leading his donkey along a rain-soaked dirt road in the little settlement of Sonora. The street was steep and as he stumped his toe he nearly fell. Reaching down to remove the rock on which he nearly tripped he was amazed at what the rain had unearthed. It was a lump of gold weighing nearly twenty-five pounds. The storm had exposed it and his stumbling had called his attention to it. 

If we found a 25 pound gold nugget, we would delight to thank the Lord. If it required a storm, would we praise Him for the stone during the storm? If it necessitated us falling to be blessed, would we thank Him at the moment?

We are to thank Him “for all His benefits…”

Mary: A Consenting Plodder 9/26/99

Luke 1:30, 31, 37 & 38

Jesus Christ in choosing to come to earth to rescue the eminently imperfect human race elected a unique portal to this planet. His purpose in coming was to make peace between God Almighty and us. To achieve this He had to be equal to both of the estranged parties: God and human beings. This necessitated the virgin birth involving the Holy Spirit and a young virgin girl from a remote peasant village named Mary.

Mary is a peerless pattern of a purposeful plodder.

The term plodder is used in a complementary way to speak of people who chart their course and don’t deviate. They know where they are going and intuitively they know they are going there.

No matter who you are or what you do there are times in the lives of virtually everyone when tempted to quit; just give up. It happens to everyone. Great achievers are those who have come to those points and kept plodding full speed ahead.

You like most people may not have a bonfire of zeal burning in your soul at all times. Just be sure you keep the pilot-light lit so at the right moment you can turn up the heat.

Equally talented and wise persons who have come to that point and quit have littered the playing field of life with unrequited ability. They have left undone what their higher calling demanded of them. Unfinished tasks are a monument to what might have been.

The saddest words on tongue or pen are these — it might have been!

Perseverance is the pavement on which the wheels of progress turn most productively.

Quitters never win and winners never quit.

Living effectively and enjoyably for Christ demands perseverance; perpetual plodding. Fits of herkey-jerkey, starts-and-stops do nothing to honor Him or add to the joy of the Christian life. A long obedience in the same direction.

Friedrich Nietzche, by no means a philosophical moral model, nevertheless shared a classic challenge to consistency in his book Beyond Good and Evil:

“The essential thing ‘in heaven and earth,’ is…that there should be a long obedience in the same direction; there thereby results, and has always resulted in the long run, something which has made life worth living.”

When you have a dream, a concept, you are persuaded is of the Lord, commit yourself to it regardless of the odds.

“Commit your way to the Lord, Trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass” (Psalm 37: 5).

A modern English translation makes it even clearer: “Commit everything you do to the Lord. Trust Him to help you do it and He will.”

If you have the conviction that what you are about to do is of the Lord: eye it, buy it, and try it. That is, make your commitment even before you solve all the problems. Personally be sold on the idea and then be willing to pay the price of persistence.

Realize that if a concept is of the Lord and you drop the ball you will have shown disrespect of the Lord by spoiling one of His ideas.

If you say you believe in the Lord Jesus Christ make a commitment. Belief always calls for commitment and commitment always calls for disciplined perseverance. If you have an idea you are convinced is of the Lord make a commitment and engage in the discipline necessary to fulfill it.

You like everyone else have great ideas. Who is your worst opponent, the one who kills more of your good ideas than anyone? Take a look in the mirror and you will find your answer. The missing ingredient is often follow-through, the failure to keep plodding.

Inspiration is derived from secular current events as well as Biblical lives.

Albert Schweitzer, a virtual genius with three graduate degrees started a hospital in the jungle. One day he asked a local with whom he had been working to bring in some fire wood. The young man had been learning to read and write and replied, “I’d like to, sir, but it’s beneath my dignity. I am a scholar – and intellectual.”

Schweitzer chuckled and said, “I’ve always wanted to be an intellectual too, but never quite made it, so I’ll carry the wood!” He went out and did it. Commitment is never beneath the dignity of a plodder.

Plodders persevere when faced with adversity and defeat. Consider the life of Winston.

A Scottish farmer was out walking one day when he heard the desperate cry of a young boy. The call for help was coming from a nearby bog. The farmer ran to offer help. He found the boy bogged down up to his waste in the thick mud and sinking even deeper. He extended his staff to the boy and pulled him to safety. Remember that mud caked boy you will meet him again in a moment.

The next day a carriage drawn by beautiful horses pulled up to the farm house. An elegantly dressed man emerged and in the moments that followed offered to reward the Scotsman, who refused.

During the conversation the farmer’s son came out of the house. (Keep the son of the farmer in mind. You will meet him again also.)

Seeing the lad the nobleman made the Scotsman an offer: “Let me take your son and give him a good education. If the lad is anything like his father, he’ll grow into a man you can be proud of.” The offer was accepted and agreed upon with a hand shake.

Now the two boys! With the passing of time the Scotsman’s son graduated from St. Mary’s Hospital Medical School, London. He later became known globally as Sir Alexander Fleming, the renowned discover of penicillin.

The mud caked son of the nobleman was Winston Churchill. He first distinguished himself in the Boer War in 1899. As a brave 25 year old he made a spectacular escape form captivity. A fellow officer writing to congratulate him predicted he would someday be prime minister of England. In part he wrote, “You possess the two necessary qualifications; genius and plod. Combined I believe nothing can keep them back.” One without the other would have kept him back. His route to that eminent office required plodding.

As first lord of the admiralty he was unfairly made the scapegoat in the Dardanelles fiasco in 1915, where 200,000 persons died in battle. His officers refused to obey his commands and lost the battle.

He became a writer and survived from royalty check to royalty check. But he kept plodding to become one of the greatest British authors.

Later in his political career he suffered two major defeats.

Five years after being elected he was un out of office because of economic reversals. From 1932 to 1940 his party was out of power and he without influence. He became absorbed with the conduct of an emerging German leader Adolph Hitler. In 1933 he made his first speech warning of Hitler’s threat to freedom. Churchill was branded a fanatic and warmonger.

He suffered deep depression which he called his “black dog.”

On the eventful morning Hitler amassed two million troops along the borders of Belgium and Holland the British began to look for a leader. Churchill was named First Lord of the Administration and days later Prime Minister. At age 66 he was prepared to lead Great Britain to their finest hour.

He infused his burning persistence into the soul of the nation. His gift of plod was contagious in the life of his countrymen. It turned their despair into hope.

In one of the darkest hours of the war he addressed his nation by radio with these inspiring Words: “We shall go to the end, we shall fight in France, we shall fight on the seas and oceans, we shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air, we shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be, we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills, we shall never surrender.”

That dogged determination is needed in the spiritual arenas of our lives. With it more spiritual conquest would be enjoyed.

This man gifted with genius and plod was stricken with pneumonia at the height of the crisis. In those days it was most often fatal. His life was sparred by a new miracle drug.

Flashback! Remember it was young Winston who was pulled from the bog by the Scottish farmer. Enter the farmer’s son educated by Churchill’s father, Sir Alexander Fleming. He administered his new drug called penicillin and the life of Sir Winston Churchill was spared. The son of the man who saved young Winston from the bog became the doctor who saved his life from pneumonia.

The gift of plod lifted the cause of freedom over the tarantelle powers of despotism fostered by Hitler.

Dr. Beck Weathers is an example of a pursuant plodder. On May 10, 1996 a violent storm swept over Mt. Everest buffeting the thirty adventurers who were descending from the mountain’s summit. The heavy snow and hurricane force winds caught them off guard. Within 24 hours eight of the climbers were dead.

Among the climbers severely injured by the spring storm was Dr. Seaborn Beck Weathers, a forty- nine year old amateur climber. Lying unconscious and exposed on the mountain’s icy rocks he had been left for dead.

The next morning, after the storm had passed, he awoke dazed and badly injured. His vision was impaired and he could see only three or four feet. His hands were badly frostbitten and he had no feeling in his feet. It’s his story let’s let him tell it:
“I was lying on my back in the ice. It was colder than anything you can believe. I figured I had three or four hours to live, so I started walking. All I knew was, as long as my legs would run, and I could stand up, I was going to keep moving toward that camp, and if I fell down, I was going to get up. And if I fell down again, I was going to get up, and I was going to keep moving until I either hit that camp or I couldn’t get up at all, or I walked off the face of that mountain.”

Dr. Weathers, a gifted surgeon, lost his right hand to frostbite, and part of his left as well. Though he lost his hands he never lost hope. He literally kept on plodding.

You may be experiencing your own icy storm and be tempted to give up. Don’t! Like Dr. Weathers keep on plodding toward your God given goal.

Now consider with me one of the most admirable of Bible plodders. We first meet her in the village of cave dwellers called Nazareth. The historian Josephus list over 200 settlements in Galilee. Nazareth was so small and undeveloped it was not included. Excavations reveal it to have been the habitat of cave dwellers. In a private moment Mary was startled by the appearance of an angel.

“Then the angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bring forth a Son, and shall call His name JESUS” (Luke 1:30,31).

As a young woman she knew the punishment for pregnancy outside of marriage was death by stoning. She being a virgin asked a logical question, “How can this be?” A tremor must have gone through her when the angel said to her:

“And the angel answered and said to her, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Highest will overshadow you; therefore, also, that Holy One who is to be born will be called the Son of God” (Luke 1:35).

Knowing the mentality of most youth today if Mary had responded as they might she would have said, “Yeah, right! Whose going to believe that?”

Not this plodder. By angelic revelation she had first to eye it. Then she had to buy it. Immediately her response indicated she was willing to try it as she replied: “Then Mary said, ‘Behold the maidservant of the Lord! Let it be to me according to your word’” (Luke 1:38).

She was a consenting plodder. Her Son, our Savior, would later pray a similar prayer in Gethsamene, “Not my will, but thy will be done.”

Belief always calls for commitment and commitment requires disciplined perseverance. Mary, a classic plodder, made her commitment and engaged in disciplined perseverance.

Logic fills in some blanks in Scripture. After the birth of Jesus Joseph isn’t heard of. At the wedding in Cana of Galilee Mary is there but Joseph isn’t. No civil wife would have dared to go to such a social event without her husband if he were living. Evidently Joseph had died. However, before his death he and Mary had other children. They are named in Matthew 13:55.

As a single parent she kept plodding along in an environment alien to easy child rearing. Some of the world’s greatest plodders have been and are parents who have faithfully reared their children without spousal support.

To such persons who may be weary and overburdened to the point of being fatigued and inclined to compromise —- don’t. Mary didn’t. She kept plodding and the Lord honored.

Jesus Christ was the God\man-man\God. As God, Immanuel, He subjected Himself to human limitations regarding His own person. He emptied Himself and became obedient to human limitations. The only time He used His supernatural powers was for the benefit of others. As an infant, child, and youth He was the earthly child of Mary. His early years are summed up;

“And Jesus increased in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men” (Luke 2:52).

Mary was involved with cultivating the young Jesus and saw to it that He developed a balanced life.
He grew in wisdom – intellectually,
Statue – physically,
Favor with God – spiritually,
and men — socially.

Certain things are known about her that help our understanding of what a model mother she was.

Theirs was a poor family. At the birth of Christ Mary and Joseph gave the sacrifice of a pair of pigeons, the gift of the poor.

She gave Him an unpretentious earthly home, the only one He knew. In that home were modeled character-forming influences.

Mary descriptively spoke of herself as “the handmaid of the Lord.” What a beautiful concept. He servant temperament was ever evident.

Gabriel had told her, “the Lord is with thee.” She lived with an awareness of His divine presence. To her God was not a supernatural being remote and uninvolved with her. He was ever present.

Obedience was a trait of Mary revealed at the time of the birth announcement. She modeled it to her household. A child who will not obey his or her parents will not obey God. Children are more likely to obey their parents if they see their parents obeying God. If the parent is willing to put self under authority the child is much more likely to put himself under the authority of the parent.

Restricting Himself to human limitations the child Christ had to learn. What He learned is evidenced by His knowledge of Scripture. He was evidently taught it in the home. The home should still be the primary place of instruction.

Later in life Jesus is depicted as going to the synagogue “as was His custom.” He was taught that divine worship was proper.

Next, let’s look in on this plodder at the wedding of Cana of Galilee. A need arises at this festive social gathering and Mary asked Jesus to supply the need. His response to her seems to our western ear harsh. Nevertheless, she turns to the servants and says, “Whatever he says to you, do it” (John 1: 5).

She was compliant and called on others to comply.

Fast forward to one of our last glimpses of Mary. Her son hangs before her on a cross. He is falsely accused of making a bogus claim that He is the Son of God.

Mary was either the most heartless mother to ever live or the most heartbroken. If the story of the virgin birth were a lie she is willfully letting her son die because of her youthful lie. It was no lie and she of all people knew it to be true. She had no doubt as to who He was. She knew Him to be the virgin born Son of God.

At the announcement of His pending birth she had sung: “My soul Magnifies the Lord, And my spirit has rejoiced in God my Savior” (Luke 1: 46).

This compliant mother who had faithfully plodded all of life’s journey with her child, the Son of God, is compliant and suffers her grief at the cross knowing she can truly say He is “God my Savior.”

Mark: A Comeback Plodder 9/19/99

Romans 5: 3 and 4

Jesus Christ spoke of the blessing awaiting those who persevere till the end.

A modern term for this Biblical word “persevere” is plod. Plodders are those who go through the sequence noted in Romans 5: 3, 4. It is tribulation that produces perseverance; and perseverance that produces character; and character, hope.

They live with a sense of expectancy; a vibrant hope. Regardless of the challenge or calamity they consistently carry on because they have hope things will change for the better. They live awaiting a better moment. It’s their character. Their character was forged by perseverance in the hour of trials and tribulations. They are finalist in the plodder championship.

“Nothing in the world can take the
place of persistence.
Talent will not; nothing is more
commond than unsuccessful men with talent.
Genius will not; unrewarded genius is
almost a proverb.
Education will not; the world is full
of educated derelicts.
Persistence and determination alone
are omnipotent. Press on…”

Little Ben Carson had little to commend him in childhood and even less cause for hope. His mother, Sonya, had dropped out of school in the third grade and she and his dad divorced when he was eight. Mrs. Carson was left to rear her two boys alone in a Detroit ghetto. Not an easy challenge.

In the fifth grade he was the uncontested bottom of his class. His class called him “dummy.”

Tests were given and each student gave his or her paper to the student behind to be sure it was graded properly. The teacher then called for all students to verbally report their grades. On a math test with 30 questions Ben missed 30. Having showed it to the student behind him he thought if he mumbled his score the teacher might think it something better than it was. When asked he answered “numm.” “Nine! Benjamin got nine right.” The teacher’s bragging on Ben was interrupted when the girl behind him shouted, “He said none, not nine.”

Perhaps Ben’s biggest challenge was that he had a pathological temper. He left a three inch gash in his mother’s head when he struck her with a hammer. He tried to stab a friend who changed a radio station. Fortunately the knife struck the boy’s belt buckle with such force it broke.

In fear he went home and locked himself in and began to think about where he was headed. He prayed for God to help him find a way to handle his temper. He stayed locked in and began reading the Book of Proverbs. As he read his eyes fell on these words: “… a man who can control his temper is mightier than a man who can conquer a city.”

It struck him. If people can make you mad they can control you. He concluded why surrender yourself to others.

His next report card got his mother’s attention and resulted in new rules. Only three pre-selected TV programs a week. He was to read two books a week and give her a written report. What he didn’t know was his mother couldn’t read so he kept reading. He now says that was in the days when parents were in charge.

He kept reading Proverbs and started praying for wisdom.

One day he startled his class mates when he identified a collection of rocks for the teacher. He remembered them from a book he had read.

He said by reading I learned how to spell. Knowing word meanings enabled me to learn grammar. This opened his world to the use of his imagination.

Within eighteen months the “dummy” went from last to first in his class. Having been a walking “TV Guide” over whom the teacher rejoiced when he got a “D” he was on a new course. Plodding and progressing. Little Ben’s plodding resulted in a scholarship to Yale University where he earned a degree in psychology. From there he went to the University Michigan Medical School where he graduated Cum Laude. He became the first ever black neurosurgery resident of Johns Hopkins University.

At the age of 32 this plodder became the Director of Pediatric Neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins University. He performs over 500 operations a year and is credited with leading the most delicate surgical procedure every performed. It was a 22 hour operation separating Siamese twins.

He credits his faith in God with his medical success, rather than hard work or intellectual aptitude. He reads every day from Proverbs and commented, “I start every morning and I end every day asking God for wisdom. I think if you ask for it, you get it.”

His definition of success is significant. “True success is taking your God-given abilities and sharing them in a way that elevates other people.” That means you too can be successful.

From last place in the fifth grade class little Ben Carson kept plodding to become Dr. Benjamin Carson a first class physician.

As a child little Sylvester was often beaten by his dad and told he had no brains. He grew up lonely and confused. He was in and quicker out of many schools. An advisor at Drexel University told him that based on his aptitude he should pursue a career as an elevator repair man.

He tried acting but his abnormal life led to one failure after another. This failure drove him to try writing with little success.

He watched Muhammad Ali fight Chuck Wepner, a relatively unknown fighter who incredibly went the distance against the odds. This inspired Sylvester Stallone to write a script for a movie he called “Rocky”—- in less than four days.

Vince Lombardi said, “It’s not whether you get knocked down. It’s whether you get up again.” Five Rockys later, Sylvester Stallone is still a champion who kept getting up and plodding on.

Determination is a synonym for a plodder. Plodders keep hope alive —- even if on life support at times.

There is a young man in the gospels who was a remarkable comeback character. He is John Mark. John was his Hebrew name. Mark was his Roman sir name. The first time we meet this young man in the Scripture is his most humiliating moment. Gospel writers occasionally include passages related to themselves without identifying themselves. John often does this by referring to himself as “the disciple Jesus loved.” Such a passage can be identified by the person telling the story being the only one who would have known it.

In the Gospel of Mark there is such an incident that leads scholars to assume it is a reference to the author, Mark.

On the eve of the arrest of Christ a young man follows the procession leading Christ from Gethsemane. Its Mark’s story, let’s let him tell it.

“Then they all forsook Him and fled. Now a certain young man followed Him, having a linen cloth thrown around his naked body. And the young men laid hold of him, and he left the linen cloth and fled from them naked” (Mark 14:50 – 52).

Mark was one of the last to abandon Christ on the night of His betrayal. To tell this modifying story on himself Mark is revealing the complexity from which he recovered. Perhaps it was his nudity that caused him to flee. Perhaps it was fear of being associated with the accused Christ. Hopefully it was his clothes being torn off. However at this stage of his young life he was not well established in his faith. Nevertheless, it left him with something to overcome.

Most persons have had a moment they would like to forget. Such incidents can cause us to drop out or cop out. They can motivate us to resolutely commit our self to making a comeback. These moments of failure color our lives. You choose the colors.

John Mark chose variegated colors.

I. HE WAS VIBRANT
Mark was the son of Mary a well-to-do Jerusalem widow. Her home was a favorite meeting place for followers of Christ.

Being reared by a single parent has its challenges. This is best known by such children. Parents can never fully understand the full impact on a child reared in a single parent home. If you are such a child there is encouragement for you.

Studies show that children reared in a single parent home have challenges others don’t. No one knows this better than the child. Parents can’t begin to understand. Analysis reveals that children from single parent homes make lower grades, have a higher rate of criminal activity, and have lower self-esteem.

Why note such depressing principles? In order that they might be known and compensated for. There is nothing that dictates that a child from a single parent home has to fall in these statistical categories. By knowing this positive influences can be brought to bear to counter the tendency.

There is nothing that insures that a child from a home of privilege where both parents are present will succeed. There is nothing that says a child from a single parent home won’t succeed. The determination lies within which colors the child chooses.

Mary, the Mother of Mark, had a wealthy brother from Cyprus named Barnabas. His name means “son of encouragement.” Throughout the Bible he is known for his winsomeness. Mary saw to it that he became a positive influence in young Mark’s life. He remained such for years. What Acts 11: 23 says he did for the members of the church at Antioch he obviously did for Mark. He “encouraged them all that with purpose of heart they should continue with the Lord.” That they should do what? “Continue with the Lord.” To make it perfectly clear, “That they should keep on plodding along with the Lord.”

In the process of plodding some fall. Mark did. However remember what Lombardi said, “It is not whether you get knocked down. It is whether you keep getting up.” Though down on occasion Mark kept getting up.

II. HE WAS VENTUROUS
Mark started out with Paul and Barnabas on their first missionary journey. It must have been exciting. They were venturing out to carry the good news of Christ’s life, death, burial, resurrection, and ascension to the world. They were to be the first heralds of the good news on the continent of Europe.

Mark made what Paul thought for the longest was an unforgivable mistake. Mark went back home to Jerusalem. He quit the team.

III. HE VACILLATED
It is not as though plodders don’t ever waver. It isn’t that they are immuned to fear. Plodders have to stare down fear.

Just as Paul contracted a painful illness Mark walked out on him. If we had to leave him at this point his profile would be that of a quitter.

His unfaithfulness to his mission caused pain for Paul and Barnabas. It caused a rift between the three and alienation between Paul and Mark. Explanations for the break of relations are varied. Some speculate Mark didn’t appreciate Paul’s authority over his admired uncle Barnabas and that caused him to leave.

This mission was about to falter because one player wasn’t playing his role. Barnabas wanted off.

Al McGuire retired as coach of Marquette after winning the NCAA basketball championship in 1976. Butch Lee was a prima donna on McGuire’s team. McGuire was trying to teach the team concept in this way: “Now, Butch, the game is forty minutes long, and if you divide that between two teams that means there is twenty minutes when one team has the ball and twenty minutes when the other team will have the ball. There are five players on each side. That means each player will have the ball for about four minutes. Now, Butch, I know what you can do with a ball in four minutes. What I want you to show me, is what you can do for the other thirty-six minutes.”

Others suggest it was homesickness that caused Mark to defect. Still others indicate he had a girl friend back home he wanted to see. It doesn’t matter what it was the grief is it broke their fellowship. That break however gives a good illustration of how Christians reconcile.

The breach of relationships was deep and long lasting. The next time there was a missionary journey Paul and Barnabas planned to go together. Barnabas insisted on Mark going. Paul was adamant that his failure on their first trip disqualified him. Paul went on along and Barnabas took Mark and they set out on a different mission. The plodder was up and about to begin an admirable spiritual recovery.

IV. HE WAS VINDICATED
While in prison in Rome Paul wrote a letter of encouragement to the church in Colossi. Therein is this greeting: “Aristarchus my fellow prisoner greets you, with Mark the cousin of Barnabas (about whom you received instructions: if he comes to you, welcome him)” (Colossians 4:10).

Right there at the prison with Paul was Mark. The breach restored, the fellowship renewed, the bond of love apparent.

Later in writing to young Timothy, Paul commented on Mark’s usefulness (II Timothy 4:11). The broken relation was restored. Full confidence had been earned.

Peter also later wrote affectionately of Mark calling him “…my son” (I Peter 5:13).

History pays tribute to Mark. When the Venetian Republic was at its zenith they named their main square St. Marcos. “The Lion” which had come to symbolize Mark stood and stand in the square and is emblazoned on their standard.

The remains of the ancient sea port of Ephesus has a lasting tribute to him. There stands four columns to have been seen by all who entered the port. On the top of the columns stood Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.

Mark’s most lasting honor is that of having been inspired to write the gospel book bearing his name, Mark. It contains no teachings of Christ. It is a record of His deeds. The word found most often in the book is “straightway.” He depicts Christ as moving from action to action. Doubtless that appealed to Him once he modeled his life after Christ.

Mark, the come-back kid had come back.

He can serve as a worthy example to any who started out following and serving Christ only to falter and perhaps even fall. The way to win is to get up every time you fall.