April 2009


In life and the ministry it is fundamental that we be clear that what is truly important is to love God and our neighbor. There will always be urgent things calling for our attention, but our lives must be directed by what is most important.

We must not be distracted with the urgent to such an extent that we neglect to do the most important thing. Don’t allow the preparing of Bible studies, church programs, Sunday sermons or rehearsal of music to distract you from what is most important in life and ministry: Loving God and your neighbor.

Jesus’ immediate response to the question of what was most important was to repeat the well known passage from Deuteronomy 6:5, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength.”: God first, God last, and God forever, All of God, and for God and by God, Loving God with all the passion of our inmost being.

There must not be anything in this world that is more important, more attractive, more vital, more necessary, and more urgent, than to love God with all that we are and our neighbor as ourselves! Matthew 22:37-40

William Jaimes, Pastor

Iglesia Bautista Hispana “Agape”, Tulsa, OK

We received several additional questions that we didn’t have the time to answer on April 26th during our first “Ask the Pastor” evening. We will try to answer all of them on this BLOG.

The first one is as follows:

When people preach a funeral they read out of the Bible, “Absent from the body and present with the Lord” (2 Cor. 5:6-9). When Jesus comes back in the clouds and the dead in Christ rise first (1 Thess. 4:13-18)., why would they have to rise when their souls could have been with the Lord for centuries? Why do we need our old body that is now dust? Is it a pattern for our glorified body?

…Jesus Christ…has abolished death and [has]brought life and immortality to light through the gospel…2 Timothy 1:10.  Jesus lived a real physical life and died in a real physical body. He was raised in His physical body. The body He had when He died. He showed His scars to prove that He was not just raised in Spirit. Our immortality is not just spiritual it is physical too.

Our faith in Jesus’ resurrection assures our PHYSICAL resurrection as well. Faith in Jesus Christ allows us to be victorious over death! Our physical resurrection is absolutely necessary. We overcome death because of what Jesus did for us. God accepted Jesus’ sacrifice for our sins and His resurrection proves that God accepted His sacrifice.

Even though the body is dust it will be raised to be reunited with our spirit. We will have the same physical body but it will be like Jesus’ body. In 1 Cor. 15 it is called a glorified body (1 Cor 15:42-58).

Our glorified body will be incorruptible, immortal, sinless, free from pain or sickness, and we will be able to see God. Jesus showed His scars from the crucifixion. He ate food and drank. He was touchable. He talked with the disciples. He could appear and disappear. Our body will be the same.

The reason for the resurrection of our body is not just for a pattern for the glorified body. It is necessary to demonstrate the truth of our victory over death. It is not just a spiritual resurrection it is PHYSICAL too.

The following Scriptures would be good for further study and meditation:

1Cor. 15:1-58; Phil. 3:20-21; Romans 6:5, 8:11; 1Cor. 6:14

g

This Saturday (the 25th) we will go fishing again. The “people kind of fishing”. We will meet at Lindbergh at 9:00 a.m. They have a $3 breakfast fundraiser for the school.

Eastwood is now a Partner in Education with Lindbergh and the breakfast is one way we can support them. The school is in our backyard or we are in the schools backyard, how ever you look at it…it’s next door.

I hope to see you Saturday. God loves to change lives and He uses us to partner with Him.

g

Choices make life interesting.  We are faced with many choices each day.  What will I wear today and where will I go?

We know what we want to do.  As believers in Jesus, we can know what God wants us to do.  However, it is still our responsibility to choose which path we will take.  God does not make our choices for us.  We have a free will and we can make unwise choices if we desire.

The exciting thing about being a born again believer is that God will help us make right choices.  By His Holy Spirit and through reading the Bible, God will tell us what is the best way to go.  Then He leaves it up to us to choose what we really want.

Whenever we make an unwise choice, we end up with feelings of regret and sorrow.  We realize that we hurt ourselves by going off the track.  But God is always ready to forgive and cleanse us from our sin. (1 John 1:9)  He will give us another chance to go in the right direction.

This is the wonderful freedom that Christians enjoy.  They can ask God for wisdom to find the right path, and He will give them the courage to take it.  When they stumble, He will forgive and help them to do better, although we can presume too long on His patience to the point He will not give us another chance.

The result of right choices is inward peace, stronger convictions, and deep joy.  It is a wonderful feeling to know you are in agreement with the Creator of the universe.  He is on your side and will even arrange circumstances to make it clear what you should do.  Wise choices make our lives productive and enjoyable.

If you have chosen to follow Jesus, God never holds a grudge against you for failure.  He is a loving Father who gently guides you in your choices.

– rosyfoot

This Sunday we are going to look at the impact the resurrection and the coming of the Holy Spirit had on the early believers. You might want to get a head start by reading Acts chapters 1-4.

The question I pose in the title of this BLOG intrigues me and convicts me. People could tell that the disciples had been with Jesus. There was a distinct difference in them.

Can people tell that you and I have been with Jesus?

g

We are really excited about this Sunday nights service at Eastwood.  This Sunday will provide an opportunity for you to ask the pastor that question you’ve always wanted to ask a pastor.  It promises to be a fun and enlightening service and we hope you will join us…

If you have a question you would like to ask please leave it in the comments section of this blog post or email it to jeff@eastwoodtulsa.org

See you Sunday!

J

God continually reminds me of the truth that “Little Things Make a Big Difference”. One unkind word, a harsh look, a little more on the credit card, a small tidbit of gossip, one little glance at a porn website…

This morning I read Spurgeon’s devotional and his message reminded me of the series I did on “little things”. Spurgeon said that Rahab’s “scarlet line in the window was a trivial act in itself, but she dared not run the risk of omitting it”. He goes on to say that some of God’s commands to us seem non essential; they are “little things”. But we know that they make a big difference! Rahab lived because she tied a red cord in her window. A little thing???

A cup of cold water in His name; a gospel tract, coin, a memorized text can make a huge difference. Pull a plug wire off your car, unhook the battery cable, and see if that makes any difference.

As we look for God to do “great and mighty things” let’s not quit doing the little things…

g

We know a lot about the blood of Jesus and its cleansing power; it cleanses us from all sin. This Sunday we are going to look at the power of the Cross to deal with us.

“I have been crucified with Christ” Galatians 2:20. How does the Cross affect the believer? Do you recognize daily that you have been crucified with Christ?

See you tomorrow…g

You can read more of this fascinating testimony from Joel Rosenberg at http://flashtrafficblog.wordpress.com

After criss-crossing the Islamic world over the last several years and interviewing more than 150 pastors and ministry leaders operating deep inside the most difficult countries for Inside The Revolution, I can report that in Iran, more than 1 million Shia Muslims have turned to Christ since 1979. In Pakistan, there are now more than 2.5 million followers of Jesus Christ. In Sudan, there are now more than 5 million followers of Christ. Not every country has seen millions leave Islam to become adherents of the New Testament teachings of Jesus. In Syria, there are between 4,000 and 5,000 believers, but this is up from almost none in 1967. In Saudi Arabia, there are about 100,000 followers of Jesus now, up from almost none in 1967. But overall, the trend has been dramatic and largely unreported.

In 1993, a Saudi sheikh by the name of Salman Al-Odeh delivered a sermon entitled “Christian Missionaries Sweeping the Islamic World.” He argued that “in Spain [Christians] have the biggest center of missionaries to Africa. They are trained really well, and their efforts lead many Moroccans to convert.” He then cited the World Christian Encyclopedia—which he described as a “dangerous survey”—and warned his fellow Muslims that “the number of Christians in Africa was 9 million only in 1900 AD, or . . . 9 percent of the whole population. In the year 1980 they became 200 million! . . . They jumped from 9 to 200 million in 80 years [and the survey’s authors] expected them to reach 390 million in the year 2000, or 48 percent of the whole population of Africa.”

During a lull in the conversation with an Iraqi in the car whom I had known for several years, I asked the meek-looking and mild-mannered Pastor Shakir how he had become a Christ follower and a pastor.

“Were you raised in a Christian home?” I asked through our translator.

“No,” he replied quietly. “I was raised a Muslim.”

“Really!” I said, a bit startled. “What did you do before becoming a pastor?”

“I was a jihad cell commander.”

I gulped. You don’t say, I thought. He certainly had my full attention now. “Please, tell me your story,” I said eagerly, pulling out my notebook. Shakir graciously agreed.

He explained that he was born in 1975 to a devout Sunni Muslim family and that as he grew up he became deeply religious. Even at an early age, he loved going to the mosque regularly, and by the age of seventeen, he had joined a secret Radical Islamic movement. He studied hard and learned quickly, and before long he was teaching the Qur’an in various mosques.

“My leaders then sent me to a military training camp where I was trained to use light weapons—pistols, machine guns, and RPGs [rocket propelled grenades]—against the infidels,” he told me. “I was so excited because I wanted to do jihad for God. I was fully convinced that the Shias and the Christians were blasphemers and that if I killed them I would be blessed.”

After successfully completing “Terrorism 101,” Shakir was made a jihad cell commander and was ordered to quietly recruit other jihadists. “I soon had a group of my own followers,” he explained. “I would put them through this military training and then help them get jobs in different government offices and other shops and businesses so they could spy for me and be in position to do great damage when we launched the overthrow of Saddam and his regime.”

One day, one of Shakir’s Radical Muslim disciples came to him and said that someone was distributing Bibles to everyone in the machine shop where he worked. The disciple was very angry and told Shakir that he had cursed out everyone in the shop, collected all the Bibles, and promptly destroyed them. All but one.

“He brought one Bible—a New Testament—to me and said I should read it and see how to react to it and counter it,” Shakir explained. He said he praised his disciple for acting quickly and decisively. Then he sent the disciple away and took the Bible home, and that night he began to read the Gospel according to Matthew.

“I read the book very fervently to find all the blasphemies and corruption,” Shakir said. “But I discovered the words started affecting my mind, and my heart started changing. These were powerful words, not human words. They seemed to me like God’s words. But I thought, ‘How could this be?’”

Shakir became deeply troubled. He kept reading through Matthew but was ashamed of himself because rather than finding fault with these Christian Scriptures, he found himself completely intrigued. He had so many questions. But whom could he ask? He couldn’t very well start discussing the life and teachings of Jesus with the members of the terrorist cell group he was leading. He couldn’t very well ask questions of the terrorist leaders above him. He didn’t dare seek out any Christians. So night after night he kept reading the Gospels, searching for answers. The more he did, the more troubled and anxious he became.

“After reading the Bible in a deep way, I began comparing it with the Qur’an,” he told me. “I was so confused, and in my confusion, I began pleading with God, ‘Please show me Yourself.’ I begged God, ‘Please, show me the right way—is it the Qur’an or the Bible?’”

Go to the BLOG address above to read the rest.

PTL

Ask the Pastor—April 26th Sunday 7pm

Do you have a theological, biblical, religious question that you would like to ask or have always wanted to ask? There are several ways to submit your questions:

1) Simply leave a comment on this post (see below)

2) Email your questions to jeff@eastwoodtulsa.org

3) Leave a question at the welcome center. There will be a basket and cards for you to fill out before or after services for the next several weeks.

4) Text your question to us the night of the event (a number will be provided that morning)

Your name will remain anonymous and your pastor will answer the questions “live” on April 26th during our evening worship service. We will not be able to answer all the questions submitted by email, text or written because of time constraints so make your questions compelling.

We will save the unanswered questions for a “next time” or we will answer the questions on the blog. The way we will judge the success of this type of event is your response and reaction. If there is positive feedback we will do it again.

Gordon

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