Sunday, December 22, 2019

Who is the Child of Christmas?

"For unto us a Child is born,
Unto us a Son is given;
And the government will be on His shoulder.
And His name will be called
Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace."
Isaiah 9:6

My regular readers have probably figured out long ago that this is my favorite verse regarding Christmas. This is my third year in a row, and my fifth year overall, that I am writing about this verse. 

In my previous posts regarding this verse I focused on the fact that Jesus came to earth in order to establish a new Kingdom, a Kingdom that is backwards to the world's ways of doing things. This year I would like to address what this verse means to each of us personally. This post is inspired by a short message given by Pastor Jeff Amsbaugh at Heritage Baptist Church during the School Christmas program. 

This verse identifies several names for Jesus, several roles that Jesus has promised to take in our lives. 

Wonderful: First it identifies that Jesus would be called wonderful. There are times in our lives where we can get bogged down by the monotonous of life and we can forget the wonders that Jesus has done for us. I am sure that each one of us, if we take the time, can identify several wonderous things that Jesus has done. This Christmas season start there. Calm yourself down from the busyness of life and think back over the wonders performed in your life. 

Were you delivered from an addiction or a nagging sin?

Has God blessed you with a wonderful family?

Have you been miraculously healed from sickness or disease?

Have you seen God bring you out of financial difficulties?

Counselor: In today's society we are hearing more and more about mental illness. Suicide and homicide seem to be on the rise and more and more people seem to be diagnosed with depression, bipolar, and other mental illnesses. In addition, we continue to see a large percentage of marriages ending in divorce. I am thankful for human counselors and, having worked in the mental health field, I have seen the tremendous benefit of psychiatric medications when properly prescribed. However, it is important for us as Christians to remember that Jesus is the ultimate Counselor. He should be the one we go to first with our issues. He should be the one that we are allowing to council us each and every day as we approach various decisions and problems. 

Jesus is our marriage counselor.

Jesus is our career counselor.

Jesus is our psychiatric counselor.

Jesus is our financial counselor.

Jesus is our legal counselor. 

Mighty God: Jesus is our Mighty God! 1 John 4:4 tells us; "You are of God, little children, and have overcome them, because He who is in you is greater than he who is in the world." It is important to remember that we do have an enemy in this world, but it is even more important to remember that our God is greater, mightier than that enemy! Jesus came down to earth as a baby, fully human, but He also came down at the Mighty God, fully divine. He conquered death, hell and the grave and took all authority in heaven and earth. He then gave us the ability to walk in that authority. When discussing how Jesus is Wonderful, I suggested looking back at the wonderous things He has done in your life. When discussing Him as Mighty God it is time to recognize those things that are not as they should be and put your faith in Him to make them right!

Are you or a family member fighting illness? - He is your healer.

Are you lacking the resources to do what God has called you to do? - He is your provider.

Are you fighting addiction or sin? - He is your deliverer, your victor

Are you experiencing attacks on your family? - He is your protector.

He is Mighty God!

Everlasting Father: You may or may not know what it is like to have a loving, earthly father. A good father is a protector, a comforter, a guide, and one who brings teaching and even discipline. On the other hand, there are few people who can bring more pain to a child than a bad father, whether that father is absent, abusive, or simply complacent. If you have a difficult experience with your earthly father then God is present to heal you from that experience and to show you what a true father is supposed to be. Still, if you had a great father, and I hope you did, we all know that our earthly father will not be around forever. I try to be the best father I can be to my daughter but I have to recognize that there will be a point where I will not be able to be there for her. God is our Everlasting Father. He is the only father who can always be there and will be there for eternity. 

Prince of Peace: Lastly, Isaiah identifies the coming Child as the Prince of Peace. There is a lot of turmoil in our society. Despite the continual promise and recognition that Jesus has overcome the world as Mighty God, there is also recognition that as long as we are on this earth we will experience trials and difficulties. The early church definitely experienced this going through significant persecution, first from the Jewish leaders, and then from the Roman leaders. There is no promise that our life will be perfect or that we will not have difficult times, but there is a promise that Jesus is our Prince of Peace. Through Him we can have peace even in the most difficult of times. Paul mentions that the peace of God "passes all understanding". In other words, God's peace will allow us to be in rest when our circumstances seem anything but peaceful. Through Jesus we can be like He was, asleep in the boat in the midst of the storm (Mark 4:38). 


This Christmas, take some time to remember who He is to you. Yes, we are celebrating the day that Jesus was born as a baby but we are celebrating that day because He came as much more than a baby. 

If you would like to read some of my previous posts about this verse here are the links:





Christmas Message from 2010.


Friday, December 13, 2019

What is your impossible?



Question #1: What is your impossible? 

Do you have overwhelming debt? A horrible health diagnoses? An eviction notice? A calling that you know God has given you but it seems it will never come to pass? 

Question #2: How does your impossible compare to Mary's? 

Mary was a teenage virgin with no special influence or position and she was told by an angel that she would become pregnant with the Messiah! 

In our Christian society we talk about the virgin birth regularly enough that it has become normal. A virgin giving birth is scientifically impossible. Mary's cousin Elizabeth was old and barren and miraculously became pregnant but at least in that case science could try and explain it away. But a virgin giving birth, that can't be explained away. The only argument people can make is to argue the veracity of her virginity.

I can only imagine what must have gone through Mary's head when the angel gave her the news. 

"Is this really happening?"
"How can this be?"
"How will I explain this to Joseph?" 

But in the end she says, "Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word." (Luke 1:37)

Despite the seemingly impossible situation Mary believed and agreed to go through whatever ridicule she would have to go through in order to fulfill the Lord's purpose.

So for this Christmas season, I ask again: What is our impossible? 

Take some time to meditate on the angel's words to Mary:

"For nothing will be impossible with God."

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

A Time of Waiting

"Then the Lord answered me and said: 
'Write the vision and make it plain on tablets, 
That he may run who reads it. 
For the vision is yet for an appointed time; 
But at the end it will speak, and it will not lie.
Though it tarries, wait for it;
For it will surely come,
It will not tarry.
Behold the proud,
His soul is not upright in him;
But the just shall live by faith.'"
Habakkuk 2:2-4 (emphasis added)

Last month I wrote a post about Taking a Leap of Faith. In that post I reference that there are four places in the Bible in which the phrase is repeated, "the just shall live by faith". Recently I took a closer look at the first of those verses in Habakkuk 2:4. The interesting thing about Habakkuk 2:4 is that it is not referencing taking a leap of faith at all, it is actually referencing waiting on God.

Sometimes it takes more faith to stay still, do nothing, and wait on God.

This is especially true when God has given us a vision and we want it to come to pass right away. A common example of someone who had to wait a long time on God's vision to come to pass was Joseph. If you read Genesis you find that Joseph had two very clear dreams from God in which his parents and brothers all bowed down to him. This was probably an intriguing and exciting dream and I am sure he was eager to see it come to pass. However, things took a very different turn for him when he was thrown in a pit and then sold by his brothers to a slave trader. When he got into Potiphor's house things seemed to start to get better as he became head of everything in the household when he again was treated unfairly and thrown in jail for something he didn't do. 

During his time as a slave and as a prisoner it required a lot of faith for him to hold onto the dream God had given him.

It would have been easy for him to give up on God but He knew that God was faithful. Eventually God brought him to a place of being second only to Pharaoh, in the most powerful country of the time, and used him to save millions of people during the famine. Even then Joseph held on to grace and mercy and told his brothers, "what you meant for evil God used for good". 

So what do you need to do when you find yourself in a time of waiting? 

1. Write the vision down - like God told Habakkuk, write down the vision or dream that God has given you and put it somewhere that you will see it every day. Keep it before your eyes so that you can continue to build your faith and know that it will come to pass. 

2. Stay faithful to what God has given you - Joseph was faithful everywhere he landed and this allowed God to use him even when He was still waiting for the ultimate vision. "There comes a time for every person where faith requires faithfulness. If you are faithful in what you have said you were going to do, God will make it happen." - Pastor Sherwood Vegsund

3. Develop your gifts - "Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, let us use them..." - Romans 12:6. Even though you are in a time of waiting it is important that you use the opportunities you have to develop your gifts. This is true even if there is no one else benefiting from those gifts at this time. 

4. Trust God to complete His work - "being confident of this one thing, that He who has begun a good work in you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ." - Philippians 1:6 Trust that God will bring the vision to pass that He has given you. No matter how long the waiting period is God's promises will come to pass as long as you are faithful.

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Learning to Be Still

"Be still and know that I am God."
Psalm 46:10

"In the secret,
In the quiet place,
In the stillness you are there..."

In today's society there is so much noise...

Through the internet and out smart phones we have constant access to limitless information, movies, music, and games. We are always connected to our friends, our family, our jobs. There is constant noise, constant stimulation, constant information. 

All of this "noise" can make it difficult to truly connect with God.

When I was in high school a new version of the above song was put out by sonic flood. In this new version it was sped up and a little "punk flair was added to the song. Many of my friends in the church loved this new version but I always thought it was contrary to the song itself. Even in a song that talks about meeting God in the "quiet place" we feel like we have to speed it up and, ultimately, make it louder. 

Yesterday I went to a coffee shop in order to get some work done and I couldn't get over how quiet it was. I should have been happy about it being quiet because I was there to focus in on work but the quiet actually seemed to distract me. It took me a while to figure out why the silence was so unusual to me and then they suddenly out on some music. It was then that I realized how trained I am to hear music in places like that. Even when we want a quiet place to step away and get work done we re used to noise being in the background. 

How often do you truly find yourself in a quiet place before God?

There is a definite time for loud praise, for time with music, as well as for other noise in our life, but there is also a time for cutting off all noise and approaching the throne of our God. 

"Be still...

Cut out the noise of your life for just a moment. Set aside your to-do list, your stresses, your challenges, and take a moment of silence, of stillness. 

"...and know that I am God."

Remind yourself of who He is. He is God, He is King, He is Lord. He is also Father, Savior, and Friend. He is all powerful but He is also intimate. He is strong and He is also gentle. He is our protector and He is also our comforter. 

As you take your moment of stillness, of silence, remind yourself of who He is and allow Him to step into your situation. 

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

A God Encounter at Jr High Camp

"You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should remain, that whatever you ask the Father in my name He may give you."
John 15:16

This is continuing the series I have been doing on God Encounters. My First Encounter had to do with God establishing a relationship with me. God used that encounter to lay a foundation of who He is in my life so that my faith in His existence and in His love for me would never be shaken. I believe this is where God always wants to start. 

This God encounter that I am writing about today had more to do with God's call on my life. When I was 12 years old I transitioned from the Children's Church to the Junior High in my church back in Portland, OR. I remember loving the praise and worship with the Junior High because we joined the rest of the youth for Praise and Worship and they had a full band. We then started talking about Youth Camp and I found out that the Junior High pastors had decided to have their own youth camp, separated from the Senior High and I remember being disappointed. Right from the start I had decided that the praise and worship would be boring because there were no instruments and it would be sung accapella. 

I don't remember a lot of details from that Junior High Camp but I do remember one worship service very clearly. We did the camp at my Junior High Pastor's house which was out in the country, outside of Oregon City, OR. We camped in tents on his back yard and we had our services in his shop and I remember the presence of God coming down in a way I had never experienced before in that shop. 

God shattered my lack of expectation and came down in a way that I never would have imagined, despite the accapella worship. 

It was also in that worship service that I first heard a very specific Word from God. This Word was very general and to this day I am still seeing more and more specifics being revealed but the Word has stuck with me to this day. 

At 12 years old, I heard God speak to me that I would be a preacher, a teacher, and a writer.  

Though the specifics of my calling are still being revealed to me, I can also attest that this has come true. I have had the opportunity to preach in several countries, teach in discipleship schools, and I have two published books on Amazon (not to mention this blog). I still believe there is more for me that God has prepared but as I keep searching I will continue to be faithful with the platforms He has given me. 

This second encounter was due to the faithfulness of my leadership. If they had not followed the leading that God had given them and had combined with the Senior High Youth Camp, which would have been easier, I may have been distracted by the band and the music, and not had the same experience with God. I definitely would have missed an important lesson that God can work through any situation.

Saturday, August 24, 2019

My First God Encounter

"Be strong and of good courage, do not fear or be afraid of them; for the Lord your God, He is the One who goes with you. He will not leave you nor forsake you."
Deuteronomy 31:6

My last post, It's Time for a God Encounter, was a general discussion about how we need an encounter with Godcand how God desires us to have an encounter with Him. It was inspired by a sermon series that we are in the middle of at Move Church presented by Pastor Mark Mcleod. 

In the post I reference a list of God encounters that famous people in the Bible had. However, sometimes we hear those stories so often that they are no longer inspiring to us. For this reason, I thought I would take this discussion a bit more personal and share with you, my readers, some of the personal encounters with God that I have had and have changed the trajectory of my life forever. 

My first story of an encounter with God is one that my long-time readers may recognize. Back in 2011 I wrote a little bit about this story in my post A Light in the Darkness: A Personal Story

When I was very young my parents divorced and my mother remarried. My stepfather had his moments of being nice but he took the verse, "spare the rod, spoil the child" to a bit of an extreme. I don't remember the details or the timeline but I do remember being locked in our rooms a lot. Instead of just grounding us he would take everything out of the room and actually lock the door with a padlock. One time he caught us reading books we had snuck into the room, so he took it a step further by taking the light bulbs out of the room and putting black tarp on the windows and around the door so that we didn't get any light in the room. 

It's rare for us to experience true pitch-black darkness. In the city there are always lights on and even when we go out into the country there are generally stars and the moon shining out at night. This was complete darkness. It was in this setting that I experienced my first encounter with God. 

I had no one else to go to but God was there, literally in my darkest hour. 

Some God encounters come out of necessity like this one. I encountered God at such a young age because there was literally nothing else for me to do, nowhere else for me to go. It was God reaching out to me and preserving me despite my horrible situation. And it is because of this encounter that I have never left Him since that young age. I share this example as an encouragement to any reader who may feel like they are in a desperate situation with no where else to go. 

God is there reaching out in the darkness ready to shed your situation with His light and love!


I plan to continue sharing personal examples of God encounters. Not all of them were out of necessity like this one. Sometimes God expects us to push through to out encounter with Him. 

Monday, August 19, 2019

It's Time for a God Encounter

"God is not a God to be understood but a God to be experienced!"
Pastor Mark Mcleod - Move Church

"Taste and see the the Lord is good..."
Psalm 34:8

The Bible is full of God encounters. Knowledge about God is good, knowledge about the Bible is good, but the Christian life is meant to be a series of encounters with God Himself. 

Growing up I used to love the works of apologists. Hearing a Christian scientist explain how creation points to Christ is always an amazing, awe inspiring thing. Hearing the story about how an atheist interviewed several prominent Christian leaders and in the end was convinced and converted to Christianity is a great thing and I praise God for those stories being out there. 

Still, the vast majority of people will not be convinced by smart arguments. No matter how succintly someone shows how nature points to Christ, someone who doesn't know Christ can argue something different. For every person that is convinced by the logical arguments of prominent leaders there are numerous who won't even listen to them. I wrote about this in my post, Do You Believe?.

What we truly need is a real encounter with God Himself!

We need a solid foundation on the Word of God. We need to know His Word so that we can stand on it when trials and tribulations come against us, but that foundation needs to be made alive with experiences with God. 

Every person that has made a significant impact for the Kingdom can identify 
at least one God encounter that turned their life around.

Throughout the Bible we can see numerous examples of these encounters:

Abraham heard from God to move from his country and his family
Jacob wrestled with God at Bethel
Joseph had dreams from God
Moses met God in the burning bush
Samuel heard God call his name in the night
David had times of worship while watching the sheep
Numerous encounters are seen with Jesus throughout the Gospels
The Apostles had Pentecost (as well as many others)

Paul describes this same thought in the following verse to the Corinthians:

And I, brethern, when I came to you, did not come to you with excellence of speech or of wisdom declaring to you the testimony of God. For I determined not to know anything among you except Jesus Christ and Him crucified. I was with you in weakness, in fear, and in much trembling. And my speech and my preaching were not with persuasive words of human wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power, that your faith should not be in the wisdom of men but in the power of God.
1 Corinthians 2:1-5


When was your last encounter with God? How does He want to encounter you today? 

If you have never accepted Christ as your Lord and Savior then I encourage you to visit my page What is the Gospel?

Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Taking a Leap of Faith

"Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen."
"But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is and that He is a rewarder for those who diligently seek him."
Hebrews 11:1, 6

"The just shall live by faith."
Habakkuk 2:4, Romans 1:17, Galatians 3:11, Hebrews 10:38

"Steppin' out on nothin' and findin' something there
Tellin' the doubt to wait, wait, wait
I'm takin' a step of faith."
Carman Licciardello

As Christians we have been called to a life of faith. In my own life I have seen little breakthrough without some level of faith preceding it. There have been a few times in which God has surprised me with something that I was not at all expecting but the vast majority of times He expected me to first take a step of faith. To move out and trust Him that He would take care of the unknowns. 

Four times throughout scripture the phrase is repeated, "The just [righteous] shall live by faith." This statement does not give an option. If you are looking to be just or righteous before God then you shall live by faith. It's not suggested, it's not requested, it is simply stated that this is how it is. 

Antoher thing that can be seen from the short statement is that we are to live by faith. It is not something that we just pull out for certain moments or difficult situations. It's not something that we use when we make a particularly difficult prayer, it is something that we live by. 

Faith should be a part of our day to day life. 

We should be putting out faith in Him each day and stepping out in trust at several opportunities. We should be making bold prayers each day. Prayers for healing, prayers for miracles, prayers for salvation. These prayers should be for others as much as they are for ourselves. We hould be willing to step out and offer to lay hand on those around us who are dealing with sickness or struggling in their marriage. 

Still there are times where God calls us to step out even more in faith. Instead of a step of faith sometimes these feel like leaps. I have had several of these moments throughout my life and I can attest that God has always come through. Below I have listed a few of my own, and my family's, leaps of faith to encourage you. This is not an extensive list but a few over the course of my life. Each of these were steps made following the leading of the Holy Spirit.

Personal Leaps of Faith:

2000 - Joined speech team despite being terrified of public speaking - Recieved miraculous deliverance from that fear
2002 - Left home for the first time to go to Bible School in Ohio - Had numerous encounters with God over the two years preparing me for future ministry
2005 - Chose to go to the Philippines despite having no money and only a month to prepare, then chose to go again later in the year despite still owing money for the first trip - God provided enough money to pay off the first trip, cover the second trip and have some extra in one night of giving at church.
2006 - Decided to stay on as a staff in the DTS despite not having built support or even having the money for a plane ticket to return to Germany - God provided all needed, led me to many experiences of ministering around the world and grew me tremendously as a leader and a preacher. I also met my wife due to this decision.
2009 - Followed my then fiance to Ethiopia from Germany, prepared our wedding, then moved to Oregon with no income or job lined up - God provided for everything and connected us with old friends who helped us settle in Oregon. He also provided an opportunity to minister to the youth at Connection Church.
2017 - My wife and I followed God's prompting to move our family across the US from Oregon to Virginia. - God gave us both jobs right away and used the experience to give me further direction in my education and calling - more to come!

What is the step of faith God is leading you to take today? What is holding you back from taking it?

For further encouragement on taking a step of faith you can read these older posts from my blog:

Risk, Fear and Faith

Becoming a Faith Giant

Friday, June 28, 2019

A Sign of a Good Leader

A sign of a good leader is not how many followers you have 
but how many leaders you create.
Mahatma Ghandi

In today's world of social media and instagram stars there is a lot of focus on followers. A quick google search will tell you that the top followed person on twitter is Katy Perry, who has 106.7 million followers and on instagram it is Selena Gomez with 135.8 million followers.

Often we think of celebrities as leaders because they have a large following, but how are they influencing those followers. It is interesting to look at the ministry of Jesus and to see how much time he focused on the 12 rather than the crowds. He had multitudes following him but he never considered the crowds to be His ministry.

Jesus's ministry was to the individual, then to the small group (the 12), and lastly to the crowd. 

Moving on to Acts we see that the 12 were the ones who changed the world. They were the ones who brought the Gospel to Jerusalem, to Judea, and to the uttermost parts of the earth. They did this not because they were followers of Jesus but because they were His disciples, because Jesus had invested the time to make them leaders.

As far as we know Mahatma Ghandi never became a Christian, never accepted Jesus as Savior, Lord, or God. Another famous quote of Ghandi's is discussed in this post and that quote underlines a part of how Ghandi viewed Jesus and Christians. Ghandi did accept Jesus as a great teacher and much of the philosophy that Ghandi is famous for is at least partially based on the teachings of Jesus. This quote may have very well come from a study of the life of Christ because it is clear that He focused on creating leaders. He didn't just teach His disciples, He spent time with them, He ate with them, He shared life with them, and He challenged them to step out into their own ministry.


Jesus is the ultimate example of where a good leader's focus should be.

In today's churches and organizations we often seem to have it backwards. The people at the top are worried first about how to get more people surrounding them rather than on developing the few closest to them and training them to do the same. They want to be seen as someone who has a lot of followers but they forget to develop leaders. 

No matter what type of organization you are involved in, no matter what position you may hold, I encourage you to strive to focus on the few, build leaders, and train them to do the same. This is how you multiply your influence and make it last beyond your own presence in that organization. 

Saturday, January 5, 2019

Seeking Him First in 2019!

"Don’t seek opportunity, seek God. If you seek God, opportunity will seek you."
Dr. Mark Batterson
Pastor of National Community Church

Dr. Mark Batterson tweeted the quote above along with a link to a sermon about a month ago. To be honest I never watched the sermon but the quote stuck with me. As I prayed over it I felt that this quote is God's word for me for 2019. 

It is easy to get caught up looking for an opportunity. We can even feel like it is a spiritual search because we are looking for an "opportunity for God to use us", but God wants us to seek Him first. 

"But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, 
and all these things shall be added to you."
Matthew 6:33

Reading this passage in context it is clear that the "these things" Jesus is referring to are our material needs (i.e. food, water, shelter). However, often that is what is behind our search for an opportunity. I would love an opportunity to better provide for my family without having to work as much as I do and I believe God is going to bring that opportunity to me. However, God wants me to seek Him first, to seek His kingdom. 

If you are a regular reader of my blog you may notice a recurring theme in my most recent posts. This is not on purpose but is simply how God has been leading me over the past few months and I believe it isn't a theme that is only for me but also for you, my reader. In November I wrote a post titled Seeking God Himself, in which I wrote how God impressed on my heart that morning the need to ask for more of Him rather than for other things and then for Christmas I wrote about how the true meaning behind Christmas is the bringing of God's kingdom on this earth and that we should seek after, and help establish that kingdom through our actions. 

This is of course not an entirely new theme either. Back in 2015 I wrote a post entitled, Four Ways We Should Seek the Kingdom First!, in which I outlined four areas of life that we should be practically applying this focus; prayer, finances, service, and evangelism. 

Sometimes we look for an elaborate word for the new year or we try to set complicated goals and there is a time and place for those things but in 2019 I challenge to make it simple. Let's go back to the basics of seeking Him and His kingdom and let everything else fall into place. As we pursue Him first in our prayers, our finances, our service, and our acts of evangelism we will automatically find opportunities seekign us out, we will find that our needs are provided for without the stress, and we will find that we are making a difference in our world without even having to try.