Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Why not choose love?

♪A Note of Thanks ♪


“Knowledge puffs up, but love builds up. Anyone who claims to know something does not yet have the necessary knowledge; but anyone who loves God is known by God.”
I Corinthians 8:1-3

For me, one of the ways I can relax is to take a brisk walk at the Birmingham Botanical Gardens and observe all of the lush vegetation and various plantings. There are many walking trails and various type garden settings as well as benches and swings along the way. One can take a leisurely stroll or a power walk to let go of the stress of life and help rejuvenate the body and mind. In Romans 12:2 Paul challenges us to “be transformed by the renewing of your minds.”

Recently, my good friend and college roommate, Keith Cardwell, was in Birmingham with his wife Lisa. Keith is the pastor of Swift Memorial Presbyterian Church in Foley, Alabama. While Lisa was attending a conference for her work, Keith and I met during lunchtime, grabbed some Sneaky Pete’s hotdogs, chips and drinks and headed to the Birmingham Botanical Gardens. After eating on a side bench in the heart of the gardens, we started a leisurely stroll towards the upper gardens that have native Southern plants, a running brook and simple trails. Incidentally, this part of the garden was originally the quarry where the stone for the pedestal of Vulcan was cut, chiseled and carried to the top of Red Mountain.

Keith and I talked about our children, looked at recent pictures of this Summer’s activities and then gradually moved on to talk about our churches; how God works through ordinary people, calling and equipping them for ministries that reach others for Christ. We both agreed that many times God works through lay people for new fresh ideas and methods to bring others to the Savior. We both shared from our journeys the recent experiences we’ve had to see how God is alive and working through His people. Many times we don’t have all the answers to some of life’s difficulties, whether it is through losing a close loved one and/or friend, disease and distress that comes our way, decisions that have to be made, heart-aches and pains, getting older and many other things we have to face in life. We really don’t have all the answers.

It seems that sometimes we take on a posture of “having all the answers, “knowing for certain that we are right,” or believing that “our way is the only way,” we often discover that we are confronted by lessons of life. We may use the old adage, “what goes around comes around,” or even the Biblical instruction that “you reap what you sow.” When we take on this attitude, we become as the scripture says, “puffed up,” which is just a nice way of saying “full of hot air.” Is this true for you?

St. Paul invites us to “love God and be known by God.” Paul invites us to use love as the answer: love of God and love of neighbor.

I can’t help but wonder what my life, your life, what our day to day living would be like if we practiced the teaching that “love builds up.” How might we interact with our families? What about our children? How might our relationships with our colleagues change? Paul in writing to the church at Corinth, a church that seemed to have had their fair share of problems getting along yet not quite understanding that “knowledge puffs up, but love builds up.” He would go on later in this same letter, in perhaps one of the most poetic and brilliant moments of his writings to say, “And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing.” (1 Corinthians 13:2)

Why not choose love? Better to be known by God than to be nothing at all, don’t you think?

Holy God, for today, just for today, help me examine my heart, confront me with the ways in which I have tried my way instead of Your way; remind me that what you desire from me is that I build up others with love. In Jesus’ Precious and Holy Name. Amen.

Joyfully serving alongside you,

I remain…
Your friend,
Mark David Jackson

Friday, September 11, 2009

♪A Note of Thanks ♪


“As Jesus was walking beside the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers; Simon called Peter and his brother Andrew. They were casting a net into the lake, for they were fishermen. ‘Come, follow me,’ Jesus said, ‘and I will make you fishers of men.’ At once they left their nets and followed Him.” Matthew 4: 18-20

Our dear missionary friends Sanan (Rogers) and David Brazzeal heeded the call of God. They met while at Samford University. Following college they went to Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. They have served in Brazil, on an island in the French speaking Caribbean and now after more than ten years in Montreal, Quebec, ministering and reaching others for Christ in an urban setting. Now, they have been asked by the International Mission Board (IMB) to go a Paris, France. If everything goes as scheduled they will be settled in France by the end of the year. They have heeded the call of God and continue to spend time discerning His will. This is a giant step of faith to move from North America to Europe.

Sanan and David are much like those first disciples who heard Jesus’ call along the sea shore where they were working and who got up and followed Him. They didn’t have all of the answers. They followed Jesus not knowing what the future might hold, but knowing that they were held by the love of God when they were in Jesus’ presence.

I wonder if you have considered that God calls all of us to service in Jesus’ name. You see, I believe that God wants each of us to use the gifts we have been given to live lives of hope and possibility. Heeding the call of God doesn’t necessarily mean that you will be called to go to seminary or a foreign land. In fact, that is not the call that God makes to most people. Still, I think God wants to call you to something greater than yourself. Are you listening?

The Bible is full of stories of God calling faithful people to do His work in the world. God called Abram and Sarah to leave their home and travel to a far away country. God called Elijah to go to Zarephath where he encountered a widow and her son, and Elijah cared for them. God called the disciples to follow Jesus, and they changed the world.

Are you listening for the call and claim of God for your life? Like our friends, discerning that call may take months of prayer, study, self-examination and listening. It is a worthy journey. It is worthy of your best efforts. I invite you to begin today. God has something to say to you. Are you listening?

Holy One, You are always more ready to speak than I am to hear. Open my mind and heart through the power of Your Holy Spirit that I might hear you call and with courage respond, “Hear I am, send me.” In His Holy Name. Amen.

With a grateful heart for serving alongside you,

I am….
Your friend,

Mark David Jackson