“You are the light of the world—like a city on a hilltop that cannot be hidden. No one lights a lamp and then puts it under a basket. Instead, a lamp is placed on a stand, where it gives light to everyone in the house. In the same way, let your good deeds shine out for all to see, so that everyone will praise your heavenly Father.” Matthew 5:14-16 (NLT2)
Jesus was directly speaking to his disciples when he spoke these words, but there was also a large crowd listening in, and clearly, he wanted them to hear what he had to say as well. At the end of his sermon, he spelled out why he was preaching what he was preaching.
“Anyone who listens to my teaching and follows (practices, acts on) it is wise, like a person who builds a house on solid rock. Though the rain comes in torrents and the floodwaters rise and the winds beat against that house, it won’t collapse because it is built on bedrock. But anyone who hears my teaching and ignores it is foolish, like a person who builds a house on sand. When the rains and floods come and the winds beat against that house, it will collapse with a mighty crash” Matthew 7:24-27 (NLT2, parenthesis mine).
Jesus, God is interested in you and me living lives of stability amidst the instability, even torrents, and disasters of our world. He wants you and me to be people of purpose, who make a difference, whose light keeps shining no matter how dark it gets, whose actions make people want to sing praises to God. But for this to actually happen, we need to hear Jesus' words and trust them enough to act on them, that’s called faith. This is why I read some portion of God’s word (the Bible) every day, think about it, take some notes, and try to make “act-on-it” connections to what is going on in my life around me. The last two mornings I read Luke 11 and 12 (We are in Luke in our church’s Bible-reading plan) and found some things to help my life keep shining brightly and keep me stable in our current crisis, and, since this is a pastor’s note, I am convinced these will benefit you too:
Pray – Luke 11:1-13
- Not if but “when” you pray. 
- Pray with persistence, keep knocking, seeking, asking. 
- Pray with a focus on God’s goodness. 
- Pray seeking God’s very best. 
Help – Luke 12:13-21
- Don’t hoard. 
- Don’t act on the fear of not getting your fair share. 
- Look out for more than yourself. 
- However little or much you have enables you to share. 
Invest – Luke 12:21, 31-34
- In more than yourself. 
- In more than the stock market and your financial portfolio. 
- In more than what will keep you comfortable to the end of your life. 
- In the goodness of your heart. 
Jesus didn’t just teach the above as a means of crisis management, he wants you and me to practice them, and much more keep-your-light-burning stuff, whether the sun is shining, or the torrents are raging. He wants you and me to build foundations that don’t crumble even under the greatest stresses and challenges.
To God be all glory. 
Love you, Pastor Hans         
 
             Jesus was talking about bread, but in the end very few people were excited about what he said. In fact even many of his supporters left him after his talk on bread. He talked about spiritual bread, but like us it was hard for them to see how spiritual bread is more important than the stuff they sell at the bakery. He also stressed the sovereignty of God, that none of us can come to God merely by our own decision. That too wasn’t exactly what everyone was hoping to hear. We love to think that we are entirely free to choose as we please, especially in spiritual things.However, before Jesus declared himself to be the “bread of life,” and before a lot of people distanced himself from him, he did make bread. He took a boys lunch of five loaves and two fish and fed well over 5000 people. They were so excited about it they were going to make him king. Can you imagine what a guy like that can do with the national debt? What he could do with welfare and Social Security? And then all he could talk about was this spiritual and theological stuff.It wasn’t that they were not willing to follow Jesus, at least the healing, feeding the masses kind of Jesus, the turning the government around kind of Jesus, the make my life a piece of cake kind of Jesus, the bless me regardless of what I do kind of Jesus. But they had little patience with this demanding Jesus, this emphasizing the spiritual Jesus, this you can’t do without me Jesus, this theologically narrow Jesus, this you have to believe and change to follow me Jesus.They were more than happy to make Jesus king on their terms, what they were not willing to do was to acknowledge that he already is king and that only his rule will endure throughout time and eternity. They were more than willing to submit to an earthly king who could guarantee a daily delivery of bread, but they willingly passed on the one who offered them “real, eternallife.”In my 27 years of being the pastor of the Lake Don Pedro Baptist Church I have seen scores of people professing to be followers of Christ only to see them check out when came to submitting to Jesus’ terms, to his rule, to his agenda. How I pray you and I will echo the Peter’s answer, and live out that profession with total commitment.To God be all glory, love you, Pastor Hans
Jesus was talking about bread, but in the end very few people were excited about what he said. In fact even many of his supporters left him after his talk on bread. He talked about spiritual bread, but like us it was hard for them to see how spiritual bread is more important than the stuff they sell at the bakery. He also stressed the sovereignty of God, that none of us can come to God merely by our own decision. That too wasn’t exactly what everyone was hoping to hear. We love to think that we are entirely free to choose as we please, especially in spiritual things.However, before Jesus declared himself to be the “bread of life,” and before a lot of people distanced himself from him, he did make bread. He took a boys lunch of five loaves and two fish and fed well over 5000 people. They were so excited about it they were going to make him king. Can you imagine what a guy like that can do with the national debt? What he could do with welfare and Social Security? And then all he could talk about was this spiritual and theological stuff.It wasn’t that they were not willing to follow Jesus, at least the healing, feeding the masses kind of Jesus, the turning the government around kind of Jesus, the make my life a piece of cake kind of Jesus, the bless me regardless of what I do kind of Jesus. But they had little patience with this demanding Jesus, this emphasizing the spiritual Jesus, this you can’t do without me Jesus, this theologically narrow Jesus, this you have to believe and change to follow me Jesus.They were more than happy to make Jesus king on their terms, what they were not willing to do was to acknowledge that he already is king and that only his rule will endure throughout time and eternity. They were more than willing to submit to an earthly king who could guarantee a daily delivery of bread, but they willingly passed on the one who offered them “real, eternallife.”In my 27 years of being the pastor of the Lake Don Pedro Baptist Church I have seen scores of people professing to be followers of Christ only to see them check out when came to submitting to Jesus’ terms, to his rule, to his agenda. How I pray you and I will echo the Peter’s answer, and live out that profession with total commitment.To God be all glory, love you, Pastor Hans