Archive for June 4, 2012


An online quiz started a year ago that examines how consistently Christians are living out the teachings of Jesus Christ has found an increase in the number of believers who are “Christians in name only.”

“The results are disturbing, as 1 in 3 self-proclaimed Christians admit they rarely live the teachings of Jesus Christ,” said R. Brad White, the founder of Changing the Face of Christianity, which created the test. “Our mission is to reverse negative Christian stereotypes by helping Christians become more like Jesus Christ. And so, our goal is to work with local churches and to help transform these unChristians into spiritually mature Christians who walk the walk, and better represent our faith to the world.”

The nonprofit Christian education organization released last week the results of the anonymous self-assessment test, which asked Christians how they would act in real-life dilemmas and sought to determine whether respondents were “Far from Christ,” a “Worldly Christian,” a “Good Christian,” or a “Spiritually Mature Christian.” Started in 2011, the results initially indicated that one in four scored as “Worldly Christians,” or “Christians in name only” as the organization describes them, but now, the latest results show that the number has risen from 23.7 percent to 30.9 – or almost 1 in 3 who are now “Worldly Christians.”

More than 1,500 people have responded to the quiz, which was started in Sept. 2011 and collected results up to April 2012. In the three other categories, only 2.9 percent ranked in the “Far From Christ” section, 38.5 percent were “Good Christians,” while 27.8 percent were “Spiritually Mature Christians.”

“A significant majority of Christians consistently live their faith. In addition to the 27.8% of spiritually mature Christians out there, 38.5% of Christians take their faith seriously and are striving daily to live as good Christians. Yes, we are still human. We stumble. We fail. We make mistakes. We screw up. These Christians aren’t perfect, but are striving to consistently practice their faith. These Christians are at the tipping point and very close to becoming spiritually mature. This is incredibly promising to us. But there is also a risk that many of them will go the other way,” added White.

Some of the questions on the quiz included: “How often do you read your Bible and/or have quiet time with the Lord?” and “How have you been transformed by your acceptance of Jesus Christ as your savior?” The test is still available on the website for people wishing to take it.

http://www.christianpost.com/news/survey-reveals-increase-in-number-of-worldly-christians-76013/


I wouldn’t last one day as a librarian. And not just because I talk too much.

It’s because I’m not a calm, nonjudgmental person who could find a child viewing lewd pictures on a library computer and do nothing about it.

I definitely couldn’t suggest that this budding pervert move to a more secluded part of the room so that others wouldn’t be offended by the raunchy images he was enjoying.

Think this doesn’t happen? Think again.

Better yet, talk to Linda Lavender, a teacher at Virginia Beach‘s Advanced Technology Center. It’s been about a week since she stumbled upon a kid who looked to be “12 or 13″ watching a raw animated movie on a computer near the middle staircase in the Meyera E. Oberndorf Central Library.

This tech-savvy high school teacher is still fuming about what happened after she reported the kid to the librarians.

“They asked me if he was watching child pornography,” she recalled. “And when I told them no, but that it was really, really graphic stuff, they told me they were sorry, but there was nothing they could do.”

Lavender, who includes sessions on ethical behavior in her computer classes and is well-versed in the school division’s tough rules on computer use, was stunned. She pointed out that very young children, coming down the stairs, could view what was on that kid’s screen.

That’s when Lavender learned that the only remedy would be to move this little smut lover to a more remote section of the library where he could watch his “constitutionally protected” movie in private.

I know. I’m ready to scream too. Not sure this is what the framers had in mind when they crafted the First Amendment.

When I first talked to Lavender on Wednesday, I was sure she was exaggerating or that she’d encountered a couple of novice librarians who were flummoxed by the situation.

So I called Martha J. Sims, director of public libraries for Virginia Beach.

Guess what? Looks like Lavender got it right.

“All of our computers are filtered, based primarily on words,” Sims said, noting that the filters are mandated by Virginia law. But those filters, she said, “don’t necessarily catch all of the images.”

Beyond that, anyone 18 or over can ask to have the filter removed. Although that certainly didn’t happen here.

Look, I understand that librarians have historically fought censorship, and I applaud those efforts. But we’re not talking about banning “The Catcher in the Rye,” “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” or “Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret.

Libraries continue to offer copies of edgy and controversial literature, as they should, despite protests by prudes.

Still, the last time I checked, library shelves were not packed with porn. If that’s what someone wants, they have to head to an adult bookstore.

But computers – especially after the filters are removed – have access to all of the detritus available on the Internet.

Sims spoke with resignation about the struggle to allow patrons, young and old, to exercise their constitutionally protected rights while “making the libraries a comfortable place for everyone.”

“Besides, everyone has their own standard of what’s offensive and what’s not offensive,” she said.

Hence the suggest-a-person-move-to-a-computer-in-a-more-private-part-of-the-library solution.

Wait. There’s more. Sims said privacy screens are being ordered for library computers around the city, but they aren’t in the main library yet.

The complicated rules regarding computer use in libraries are rooted in law and court cases, Sims noted. Beyond that, while schools fill an in loco parentis role, libraries do not.

“A library is a public place, like an airport,” Sims replied after I asked about protecting kids who patronize the library without their parents.

Frankly, I’m starting to think that airports may be a more wholesome place for kids than public libraries. At least newsstands there keep the raunchy magazines behind the counter.

Imagine, for a minute, a man sitting in a public library soaking up all the dirty delights the Internet offers – except kiddie porn, which is illegal – as book-loving cherubs wander by on their way to check out “The Velveteen Rabbit.”

Think about that, next time you drop off your darlings at the library.

On second thought, don’t leave your kids at the library. Go in with them. Hover like a helicopter while they’re on the computer. If you catch your offspring watching dirty movies, do what I’d do right before I’d get sacked as a librarian: Whack ‘em with a paperback and pull the plug on their fun.

http://hamptonroads.com.nyud.net/2012/05/letting-child-surf-smut-public-library-plain-obscene

That night...

Posted: June 4, 2012 in This N That

Reblogged from iamjedidiah:

Click to visit the original post

This is a part of a book I wrote last year that I sadly couldn't publish THEN. I pray I can so soon. Let me know what you think...

+++ THAT NIGHT…

I DID THE RIGHT THING, the man told himself, over and again. I did the right thing. No one gets hurt. I mean, if after all he really is what he says he is, then there’s no doubt that he can get out of there in an instant and be with the rest of us later this evening.

Read more… 1,707 more words

This was a very interesting take on what Judas may have been thinking.

A California church led by a gay pastor has sponsored a billboard erected in North Carolina, apologizing to the gay community about that state’s recent constitutional ban on gay marriage and civil unions.

The billboard, sponsored by Missiongathering Christian Church in San Diego, Calif., and erected on Billy Graham Parkway in Charlotte, N.C., reads: “Missiongathering Christian Church is sorry for the narrow-minded, judgmental, deceptive, manipulative actions of those who denied rights & equality to so many in the name of God.”

“The statement we are making is big and its bold. It is a message we are passionate about sharing,” the church says on its Facebook page called, “Our Hearts Are With You.”

Alex Roller, Spiritual Formation pastor of Missiongathering Christian Church, was identified as a homosexual in a recent article by examiner.com.

Rich McCullen, senior minister of MissionGathering, told The Huffington Post that the root motivation behind the banner was “to say [that] some Christians don’t speak for ALL Christians, and to tell the LGBT community of North Carolina and their straight allies that there is a community of faith across the country, and many in between, that stand in solidarity in saying that ALL people are created equal in the eyes of God, that there are faith communities that accept and support ALL people, and that this fight is not over.”

The church says the response that has been directed at MissionGathering has been positive, whereas the comments on the Facebook pages and websites

McCullen says his church might consider buying more billboards in other states where a ban on gay marriage is being proposed. “The local and global church should stand up for same-sex equality,” he was quoted as saying. “It’s not a social issue; it is a human issue. We must speak out for those who are oppressed and marginalized, just as Jesus did throughout His life and ministry.”

After the passing of the ban in North Carolina, known as Amendment 1, through a vote on May 8, a photo of the church’s original billboard put up in 2008 in San Diego in response to the passing of a similar ban in California re-surfaced online and went viral, according to the Facebook page. “People from all over the country (and even other countries) saw the photo and contacted us ‘thanking’ us for putting up the billboard. When we started returning people’s emails and phone calls to tell them ‘thanks, but that picture was taken four years ago,’ we began asking the question, what if we did it again?”

The church believes their message is “so important that we are willing to take crazy risks and go to extreme measures to challenge some of the current ‘Christian’ messages that are out there.”

“We understand that one of the risks of putting this message out there like this is that we might alienate our Christian brothers and sisters,” MissionGathering says on the Facebook page. “We might be viewed as being divisive, causing further division in the Body of Christ. However, we feel it is more important that we love the unloved and defend the discriminated. If, in the process, we ruffle the feathers of fellow Christians, perhaps that is an okay price to pay. Perhaps those feathers need a little ruffling.”

Amid the ongoing debate on gay marriage, many Christian leaders have called on the Christian community to reach out to homosexuals with compassion and love but without compromising the biblical stance that homosexuality is a sin.

“There is a saying in the South that ‘we just love people to death,’” said Dan Wilson of Harvest USA in an earlier interview with The Christian Post. “But as Christians, we need to love them to life instead of loving them to death. Most people, including pastors and church leaders, are afraid to talk to some about their sin because they feel guilty about their own lives. We simply need to all agree that we’re all sinners and that the reason Jesus died on the cross is for our sins.”

http://www.christianpost.com/news/calif-church-erects-billboard-in-nc-apologizing-for-gay-marriage-ban-75947/


You’re insecure, Don’t know what for, You’re turning heads when you walk through the door. Don’t need make-up, To cover up, Being the way that you are is enough. -From “What Makes You Beautiful” by One Direction

Move over Justin B…apparently 1D has stormed the beaches enough to invade your YouTube territory, baby! “What Makes You Beautiful” is much more than an internet splash with over 140 million views and rising like the tide…

Or maybe a small assembly of teen and tweenage girls have watched and replayed the video hundreds of thousands of times since its February release?

Either way, the overwhelmingly hair flipping boy band is moving rapidly in one successful direction, and they are proving what they believe by putting it in a song. And their message is-

Somebody is beautiful.

Who? Well at least the three girls in the video are to Liam and the mates – and apparently the standard for beauty consists of an innate twirling ability, the capacity to take 1D seriously, and mad sparkler waving skills.

Like us on Facebook //www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fpages%2FThe-Christian-Post%2F41093998634&send=false&layout=button_count&width=100&show_faces=false&action=like&colorscheme=light&font&height=21

 

And I may be mistaken, but it feels like “beautiful” is mainly equated with physical appearance:

You don’t know you’re beautiful, If only you saw what I can see, You’ll understand why I want you so desperately. Right now I’m looking at you and I can’t believe, You don’t know, Oh oh, You don’t know you’re beautiful.

And if that’s true, then this song is yet another run of the mill “looks mean everything” kind of deal – right?

I grieve for people who are trapped in that game, because the “I’m valuable because I’m pretty/handsome” worldview is the express lane to a shallow life. All external beauty fades, and before you know it, you’ll end up turning into a surgery obsessed person with your skin stretched out more than a used rubber band…(Hollywood, anyone?)

But I would like to show you what really makes you beautiful:

Oh yes, you shaped me first inside, then out; you formed me in my mother’s womb. I thank you, High God-you’re breathtaking! Body and soul, I am marvelously made! I worship in adoration-what a creation! You know me inside and out, you know every bone in my body; You know exactly how I was made, bit by bit, how I was sculpted from nothing into something.

Your thoughts towards me-how rare, how beautiful! God, I’ll never comprehend them! I couldn’t even begin to count them- any more than I could count the sand of the sea (Psalm 139:13-15;17-19).

When God looks at you, He sees beauty because He handcrafted you from conception. All the unique features and intricate facets of your being are the result of God’s artistic endeavor. And because we are a direct production of the Potter’s hand, we are in His loving thoughts more than 140 billion times a day!

And…we’re beautiful.

Maybe not by the world’s petty, small minded, one dimensional, superficial and super facial standards – but we are defined as beautiful because we reflect the image of the Beautiful One who created us. And when you download this truth into the core of your self-perception, everything changes.

And your life can start moving in a different direction, knowing that God is making you more beautiful each day in eternal ways. Here’s the way C.S. Lewis describes this process:

Imagine yourself as a living house. God comes in to rebuild that house. At first, perhaps, you can understand what He is doing. He is getting the drains right and stopping the leaks in the roof and so on; you knew that those jobs needed doing and so you are not surprised. But presently He starts knocking the house about in a way that hurts abominably and does not seem to make any sense. What on earth is He up to? The explanation is that He is building quite a different house from the one you thought of – throwing out a new wing here, putting on an extra floor there, running up towers, making courtyards. You thought you were being made into a decent little cottage: but He is building a palace. He intends to come and live in it Himself.” ―From Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis

I love waking up each morning knowing that I am a holy construction project that is becoming more stunning in His sight each day. I’ve been set free from the shackles of our shallow society’s standard of what makes people beautiful – and that’s a good thing.

And this is a huge motivation for sharing our faith with our friends who don’t know Jesus – right? People watch videos like 1D’s Volkswagen commercial because they desperately desire for someone to tell them that they are beautiful. And what great news we have to share with them, wouldn’t you agree?

When people place their trust in Jesus Christ for salvation, He empowers them to shatter the world’s warped circus mirror that supposedly defines our worth and replace it with the true image of the God who chose to die rather than live without us. He changes the lyrics to-

If only you saw what He can see, You’ll understand why He loves you so desperately.

So friends, no more smiling at the ground. Look up to heaven where you know God is smiling down on you…that’s what makes you beautiful!

http://www.christianpost.com/news/what-makes-you-beautiful-75951/


Miss Rhode Island won last night’s “Miss USA” contest. Her support for transgendered contest participants drew loud applause from the crowd and is consistent with the pageant’s official position. Miss Ohio is also in the news for citing “Pretty Woman” as a positive depiction of women on screen. In the film, Julia Roberts plays a prostitute who eventually leaves her profession with a man who had hired her services for a week.

I am tempted to spend this morning’s essay voicing my frustration at the downward moral spiral of our culture, but my protests won’t change much. How can Jesus’ followers make a positive difference in a society that has lost its way?

Consider a story on today’s New York Times website that caught my eye: “32 innovations that will change your tomorrow.” One of them is called “the liar’s workout.” When amateur golfers were told, falsely, that a putter belonged to professional golfer Ben Curtis, they putted better than other golfers using the same club. In another study, cyclists were pitted against a computer-generated opponent moving at, supposedly, the exact speed the cyclist had achieved in an earlier time trial. In fact, the avatars were moving 2 percent faster; the human cyclists matched them, setting new speed levels.

When I read about “the liar’s workout,” I thought immediately of C. S. Lewis‘ suggestion that we should pretend to be like Jesus. The Model Prayer begins, “Our Father . . .” These words suggest that we are the sons and daughters of God. As Lewis says, “To put it bluntly, you are dressing up as Christ. If you like, you are pretending.”

To what end? “The moment you realize, ‘Here I am, dressing up as Christ,’ it is extremely likely that you will see at once some way in which at that very moment the pretense could be made less of a pretense and more of a reality. You will find several things going on in your mind which would not be going on there if you were really a son of God.” When we change accordingly, “the Christ himself, the Son of God who is man (just like you) and God (just like his Father) is actually at your side and is already at that moment beginning to turn your pretense into a reality” (Mere Christianity, chapter 29).

Why? Because this is God’s purpose for your life: “those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers” (Romans 8:29). Everything God is doing in your life is a means to the end of making you like Jesus.

The more we are like Christ, “the light of the world” (John 9:5), the more we reflect his light to our dark culture (Matthew 5:14-16). If you were to be more like Jesus this morning, what would you change first?

http://www.christianpost.com/news/miss-usa-and-the-liars-workout-75999/


When it comes to the latest comic book news, I’m reminded of what the late humorist Will Rogers used to say:

“All I know is what I read in the newspapers.”

So, what I’m about to tell you is a bit more than I know, but if you have teenagers who read Marvel and DC comic books, you’ll want to know about it, too.

Both comic book lines are attempting to capitalize on the culture‘s increased acceptance of homosexuality and same-sex marriage. Marvel is planning a story line that features a wedding between characters Northstar and Kyle. Meanwhile, DC Comics has just announced that the Green Lantern is homosexual.

There was a time when comic book themes, however fantastical, were still pretty much tame and moral fare. They tended to champion good vs. evil. A parent didn’t have to worry about their child picking up a copy of a compromising comic book, unless you consider the Superman controversy of many years ago. Back then, parents became alarmed when some kids, so inspired by the “Man of Steel,” began to tie bath towels around their necks and jump out of second story windows thinking they could fly.

But now that both comic book lines have committed to plowing this new ground regarding homosexuality, what’s a parent of a teenager (both the Marvel and DC series in question have an age-15-and-up rating) who reads the comics to do?

Some moms and dads may encourage their children to invest their time in other reading material, and rightly so. After all, there’s only so much time to read. And spending it on a comic book as opposed to something more constructive and redeeming strikes me as a less-than-optimal choice of free time.

But parents might also want to capitalize on this controversial development and use it to initiate an age-appropriate conversation about God’s design for human sexuality. It may sound silly to pivot from the Green Lantern to the Bible, but the key to connecting with our children is to grab their attention and communicate in relevant fashion. Talking about sex can be an uncomfortable assignment, but if they’re already aware of this controversial development, you could use the comic book story as a natural bridge, at least from their perspective.

Incidentally, both comic lines have expressed a desire to use the forum to accurately represent today’s culture. If that’s the case, I do hope that the story lines will thoughtfully and respectfully portray religious opposition to same-sex marriage. It would be a cheap shot to do otherwise.

And as a post script, I would like to compliment Marvel on their recent launch of Blue Ear, a story featuring a super hero who fights evil with a special hearing aid. Apparently the strip was launched after a mother of a partially deaf child petitioned the company. Her child, once self-conscious about wearing a hearing aid, now thinks it’s cool.

This is the power of pop culture on children.

Those who possess it need to remember to use it wisely – and to use it well.

http://www.christianpost.com/news/thoughts-on-homosexual-comic-book-characters-76001/


Worry about eroding religious freedom could sway Catholic voters further away from President Barack Obama, and the Catholic voting bloc typically predicts the winner in presidential elections.

Yet, as conservatives continue to pound Obama in ads geared toward the faithful, some Catholics who care about the president’s slip in polls plan to campaign for him on social media sites. Both sides, campaign strategists say, are trying to secure the important vote.

“Catholic voters are a critical and crucial part of winning the election,” said Burns Strider, a Washington-based strategist the Democrats brought on to hold Catholic and evangelical voters after the 2004 election. Then, he said, “We were adrift … in our mooring with a lot of our traditional constituencies.”

The Obama campaign recently moved Michael Wear, an executive assistant in the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, to Chicago to become the campaign’s faith vote director. Wear, 23, a Buffalo, N.Y. native, describes himself first as a Christian in his Twitter profile and often tweets about religion, politics and social issues.

“Religious liberty is becoming a major campaign issue as many Catholics, along with other Americans, are realizing that religious freedom and conscience protection can no longer be taken for granted,” said Mary Ann Glendon, a Harvard law professor the former U.S. ambassador to the Holy See.

Glendon, who grew up in a family of Massachusetts Democrats, is registered independent and supports Republican nominee Mitt Romney. She said his “explicit promise” to reverse any regulation that restricts religious liberty is “reassuring.”

Pete Flaherty, religious outreach director for Romney, said his campaign will try to reach Catholics individually, “diocese by diocese, parish by parish.”

Romney, a Mormon, “stands shoulder to shoulder with the Catholic voter,” said Flaherty, his longtime senior advisor. During GOP primaries, exit polls showed Romney won among Catholics in every state but Tennessee, and their vote decided close contests in Ohio and Michigan.

“Catholic voters will have a clear choice in this election, when it comes to protecting life, traditional marriage, and religious freedom and the recognition that economic growth lifts people out of poverty and provides them with the dignity of work,” Flaherty said.

That message comes across in a YouTube video, “Test of Fire: Election 2012,” that has attracted more than 1.5 million views since March. Though it doesn’t name either presidential candidate, the video appears alongside others promoting conservative values and opposing Obama, such as one titled “Obama mocks and attacks Jesus Christ.”

“Will you vote the values that will stand the test of fire? Some things are more important than high gas prices or a faltering economy. They are life, marriage and freedom. This November, Catholics must stand up and protect their sacred rights and duties,” says the Test of Fire video produced by Creative Lab LLC in West Palm Beach, Fla.

A Gallup survey in early May found Catholic voters evenly split for Obama and Romney, though white Catholics who identified themselves as “mostly” or “moderately” religious favor Romney and the nonreligious support Obama.

In April, a Pew Research Center survey found Obama’s approval among Catholics dropped 8 percentage points since March, down from 45 percent, as support for Romney rose 6 points to 57 percent.

“That drop among Catholics is very concerning,” said Al Zangrilli, a member of Pittsburgh Catholics for Obama.

The group of 80 people, including two priests and 10 nuns, held its inaugural meeting in March and last week debuted a website, www.pittsburghcatholicsforobama.org, to provide information for Catholic voters who might be hesitant to choose Obama again.

Zangrilli thinks Catholic voters could tip the election in battleground states such as Pennsylvania and Ohio. With the website, he said, “Our aim is to provide a place for Catholics to know that, even if all of the president’s positions don’t line up with the Catholic (doctrine), they can still vote for him.”

The site claims Obama’s views and policies affirm the major principles of Catholic social teaching, such as helping the poor and promoting peace. It describes Obama as “a person of integrity and moral convictions (who) recognizes the complexity of moral issues which divide Americans.”

“He affirms our responsibility to work together to bring about the common good,” the website says.

In every modern presidential election, the Catholic voting bloc has been a harbinger of the popular vote, said Catherine Wilson, a Villanova University political scientist who specializes in religious voters.

“They are the ultimate swing vote. Where they go, so goes the election,” she said.

Though many Catholics decried Obama’s support of abortion and embryonic stem cell research in 2008, he won 54 percent among Catholic voters against Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona.

Now, Obama’s acceptance of gay marriage and a raging argument over religious freedom that began with his administration’s health insurance rule involving birth control, could shift that support.

Catholic leaders in eight states and the District of Columbia are suing in federal court to exempt religious organizations from a provision in the 2010 Affordable Health Care Act that mandates employers offer insurance covering contraceptive costs.

Church leaders including Bishop David Zubik in Pittsburgh and his predecessor, Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington, argue the requirement violates religious freedom. The mandate includes a radical definition of what constitutes a religious community and ministry, Wuerl said on May 27 on Fox News Sunday.

“The new definition says you are not really religious if you serve people other than your own and if you hire people other than your own,” Wuerl said. “That wipes out all of the things that we have been doing, all the things that we contribute to the common good — our schools, our health care services, our Catholic charity and even parish soup kitchens.”

The Pew data found Obama’s support among other demographic groups that are considered reliable Democratic voting blocs — people ages 50 to 64 and those making $30,000 to $75,000 a year — also slipped 8 percentage points from March to April. The Washington-based nonpartisan research center has no immediate plan to update its poll on Catholics.

The Pew survey, during uproar over the health care mandate, might indicate “some Catholics are exhibiting a mild case of voter backlash,” Wilson said. But a more plausible reason for Obama’s slipping popularity is voter angst about the economy, she said.

Still, social issues can weigh heavily with voters. Duquesne University law professor Nick Cafardi, a member of Pittsburgh Catholics for Obama, resigned from Franciscan University in Steubenville in 2008 following his vocal support of Obama.

“In 2008, it appeared that if you were Catholic and casting a vote for Obama it would be a mortal sin,” said Joyce Rothermel of Wilkins, former CEO of Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank and another member of Pittsburgh Catholics for Obama.

Salena Zito

Salena Zito is a political analyst, reporter and columnist.

http://townhall.com/columnists/salenazito/2012/06/04/as_catholics_go_so_goes_the_nation/page/full/


Most of us are familiar with the events in the upper room, where we see Jesus washing the dusty feet of His followers and preparing them for the drama that was about to unfold in the final stage of His earthly ministry. When Jesus—“troubled in spirit”—predicted that one of them would betray Him, it’s no wonder that the disciples “stared at one another, at a loss to know which of them he meant” (John 13:22). Weren’t they all fully committed to Jesus? For three years they had been in this thing together. Little did they know that there was a traitor in their midst.

Betrayal often comes from those we would least suspect. And—here’s a news flash—the person you might least suspect could even be you. The seeds of betrayal are sown in the unseen world of our hearts. And while the seeds may be unnoticed for a time, left unchecked they will inevitably begin to pop up to the surface of our lives in tragic ways.

Some of us have already betrayed Jesus at the heart-level. Often it is a slow, subtle shift from being fully devoted to Him, to following the seductive lure of personal pleasure or gain. Hearts dedicated to cash and comfort are quick to bail when Jesus calls us to sacrifice and suffer for Him. But, whether the betrayal is “big” or seemingly small, it is always in the face of His love. That’s what makes it so wrong, so brazen. When we lose the wonder of His amazing love for us, when we fail to look at His nail-scarred hands, when we start taking His daily provision for granted, we run the risk of cultivating a compromised heart.

And when we betray Jesus, it also shows how stubborn we can be. Clearly, Judas had already made up his mind, or perhaps the love that Jesus extended to him in the upper room—washing his feet and honoring him with a distinguished seat at the table—might have made him think twice. It’s a reminder that when we have decided that we want to sin—that the wrong in our lives serves some purpose that is more important than anything else—we have the capacity to insulate our choice from any outside influence that would cause us to change. We go to church and essentially say to God, “I don’t care what You or anyone else says today. I don’t plan on changing. I don’t care what my spouse says, what my friends say. I don’t care what it means to my job, to my family, or even to Your reputation.” The resolve to sin is an engine that is powerful enough to drive us past even the deepest love of Christ all the way to betrayal. Sin is often an in-His-face, stubborn enterprise.

It’s what happened to Judas and, if we’re not careful, it can happen to us. But if we carefully cultivate a heart that responds to Jesus’ amazing love, we can find ourselves in the group of followers who will stay true to the end!

So, whose crowd are you in—the 11 who followed Jesus regardless, or the one who wanted life his way regardless? Think about it!

YOUR JOURNEY…

  • In your opinion, what heart issues may have led Judas to eventually betray his friendship with Jesus? Can you identify with any of those issues?
  • You may not be tempted to turn Jesus over to the authorities as Judas did, but in what ways do we betray Jesus in terms of our friendship and devotion to Him?
  • What issues in your heart might threaten to derail your commitment to Christ? If you’re not sure, ask Him to reveal those areas to you—just as He revealed the reality of Judas’ imminent betrayal—and then pray that He will break down any stubbornness that might keep you from responding to His love.
  • How can you avoid cultivating seeds of compromise in your heart?

http://getmorestrength.org/daily/the-sting-of-betrayal/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+GetMoreStrength+%28Strength+For+The+Journey%29


He Himself has said, ’I will never leave you nor forsake you’ —Hebrews 13:5


What line of thinking do my thoughts take? Do I turn to what God says or to my own fears? Am I simply repeating what God says, or am I learning to truly hear Him and then to respond after I have heard what He says? “For He Himself has said, ’I will never leave you nor forsake you.’ So we may boldly say: ’The Lord is my helper; I will not fear. What can man do to me?’ ” (Hebrews 13:5-6).

“I will never leave you . . .”— not for any reason; not my sin, selfishness, stubbornness, nor waywardness. Have I really let God say to me that He will never leave me? If I have not truly heard this assurance of God, then let me listen again.

“I will never . . . forsake you.” Sometimes it is not the difficulty of life but the drudgery of it that makes me think God will forsake me. When there is no major difficulty to overcome, no vision from God, nothing wonderful or beautiful— just the everyday activities of life— do I hear God’s assurance even in these?

We have the idea that God is going to do some exceptional thing— that He is preparing and equipping us for some extraordinary work in the future. But as we grow in His grace we find that God is glorifying Himself here and now, at this very moment. If we have God’s assurance behind us, the most amazing strength becomes ours, and we learn to sing, glorifying Him even in the ordinary days and ways of life.

http://utmost.org/the-never-forsaking-god/