Saturday, April 29, 2017

MAY ISSUE... 8                 WONDERFUL WORDS OF LIFE...

                                                                By Dr. Keith J. Wise

I. INTRODUCTION: 

    May is the month of offerings.  There are two noted holidays in the month that signal beautiful gardens, new life, and national memories.  The holidays that I note are Mother's Day and Memorial Day.  Below I will emphasize some noted information concerning Memorial Day, and provide some great quotes for Mother's Day.  I will continue to provide another chapter on our our journey in Church History, and contribute another sermon outline, for those ministers/elders who preach on a regular basis.  Next month I want to exhibit a Communion Meditation and talk about its purpose in preparation for taking the Lord's Supper.  May is a growing month of display and offerings of remembrance. Therefore, read and learn and share as God receives the glory for this blog.  Why??? BECAUSE IT STILL MATTERS...

II. DIGGING DEEPER... (The Journey of Church History)

     A couple of months ago I introduced this topic to inform, and to fill in blanks as to the subject of how the church finds itself in its modern condition in the West.  To summarize, we noted that there was a movement from the functional simplistic model of the New Testament to a culturally biased over lay model of societal traditions that tended to embrace some forms of paganism.  Controversies emerged in several areas as to the nature of Christ and the divisions of leadership roles within the the Church. Instead of the emphasis of "the priesthood of all believers" we see a strict division of Clergy/Laity that encumbered the discipleship of converts, growth and provisions of the local church; thus confronting the pagan culture that existed at the time.   In the West, a system of governing reflected the old Roman political arrangement of the Roman Empire.  Great ecclesiastical systems then restricted, and at times reinterpreted New Testament models laid out by the Apostles and the Holy Spirit.  It is my conviction that there was a genius in the simplicity of the Biblical model. By abandoning that model, division was propagated over unity. I believe Church History bears this out.
    By 1054 the various versions of doctrinal interpretations cast themselves in the form of the Eastern and Western Churches.  "The Great Schism" as it is called, finds a pronounced number of reasons for this split.  Here are a few but not all.
1. Those congregations of the Eastern areas tended to be more "philosophical" in their view of scripture and church liturgy.  The Western church saw all "traditions" binding and were practical in their approach.  
2. The Eastern Church produced, according to the West, a vast majority of the "heresies" that would endanger the churches' effectiveness.   Examples of these would be forms of Gnosticism, Docetism or coming from a Greek word meaning "to seem."  In other words it only "seemed" that Christ died on the cross and rose from the dead. Forms of Monasticism, or the withdrawal of communities of believers from the world to meditate, redefine and focus on various spiritual disciplines occured; even though this exclusive contradicted the "Great Commission" of the Lord to "go into all the world."(Matt.28:18-20)
3. The changing of the capitals of the Eastern Empire in A.D. 330 by Constantine brought a new invigoration to the East, which possessed larger and wealthier populations than the West.  Constantinople, built on the old Greek site of Byzantium, became a growing trade and intellectual center.  The Eastern Church sought to rival its Western counterpart and did. Space does not permit us to enumerate such areas.  The greatest rival of the Bishop of Rome, who would eventually be elevated as Pope, was the Patriarch of Constantinople.  
4. Doctrinal differences also protruded during the centuries after 1054. Here are a few of the thorny issues that divided East and West Churches: Celibacy, the dating of Easter, Confirmation and who could perform such an act, the use of images (the "Iconoclastic Controversy") the nature of the bread for the Lord's Supper.  The East permitted "leavened" bread, the Western church used "unleavened bread."  Eventually, Popes in the West excommunicated Patriarchs in the East and vice versa in a cavalcade of  "power" controversies.  Church councils and edicts tended to bring strange conglomerations  of dictates to both sections of the Eastern and Western Churches.
     There were attempts at reconciliation between the East and West because the division was weakening both traditions in light of Islamic expansion in the East. Of all the Crusades from the 11th to the 13th centuries only the First Crusade was successful in the eyes of the West.  By the 4th Crusade (1202-1204) we see the tragedy of Venician businesses backing this crusade in order to weaken and even eliminate Constantinople as a competitor.  The great city was sacked by the crusaders in this crusade from which she never recovered. There was the 17th Ecumenical Council or the Council of Ferrara in Florence(1438-1439) in which compromises were made on both sides, due to the invasion of the Ottoman Turks.  By 1453 Constantinople fell to the Turks, essentially ending the pronounced Christian influence in the East. By 1869 Pope Pius IX, the longest reigning Pope, invited representatives of the Patriarch of the Eastern Orthodox Church to meet in what would be called Vatican I.  The Patriarch refused.  In 1894 Leo XIII called for reunion of churches and sought a meeting through a letter to the Easter Patriarch. The Patriarch sent a letter back to the Leo XIII enumerating all the errors of the Roman Catholic Church in the West. There seemed to be a breakthrough by what is called Vatican II or the 21st Ecumenical Council (1962-1965) when Pope Paul VI met with the Patriarch (Athenagoras) of the Eastern Orthodox Church .   There have been contacts since these official meetings. A number of informal conclaves  attempted some form of reconciliation.  This has become more difficult over the centuries since the original Orthodox Church of the East has itself been divided into several basic Orthodox Communions.  They have remained in touch with the original Eastern Patriarch and continue in communion with him. These are: 1.)The Holy Orthodox Catholic Apostolic Eastern Church, 2.) The Greek Arch-Diocese of North and South America, 3.) The Albanian Orthodox Church 4.) The Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Church, 5.) The Orthodox Church of Greece, 6.) The Serbian Orthodox Church, 7.) The Russian Orthodox Catholic Church (note- the Patriarch of Moscow as leader). All of the above separated  from the Eastern Orthodox tradition in 1589. There are several changes in tradition and order of liturgy, but they remain closely affiliated.  NEXT MONTH WE WILL MOVE INTO THE HISTORICAL JOURNEY OF THE PROTESTANT CHURCHES.

III. DID YOU KNOW? THE MEMORIAL DAY LEGACY...

     No day of the year is more typically American than Memorial Day.  It is observed each year at the end of May.    Its roots go deep into our national character.  As a people, we have profound and abiding respect for courage and bravery, and thus we are bound close to those who have died in battle defending the ideals in which American people believe.  In America, more than anywhere else in the world, the life of each individual is a very dear and precious commodity, and death, therefore, assumes a far greater proportion and significance.
     Originating in the South shortly after the Civil War, Decoration Day, as it was first called, would be later adopted by most of the other states of the Union.  It is now universally celebrated by our country. Originally intended as a day for paying homage only to those who had given their lives for their country in battle, it was solemnized.   This day became generally popular for a broader observance as a logical time for relatives to gather at cemeteries to pay tribute to all departed loved ones.  This is still the case, as in many towns and cities of America, families decorate their deceased family's tombstones and plots.
     In 1922, the first sale of "Buddy Poppies" was held in Memorial Day week, sponsored by the American Legion, using poppies made by French women and children in the devastated areas of France from WWI.  Two years later, the plan was expanded to permit veterans of the First World War, who were disabled but capable of some employment, to make the poppies to be sold, and this practice is still in use, although more symbolically than in actual fact. The name "Buddy Poppy" was selected as a means of honoring "buddies" who had given their lives in the war; and the poppy was selected as the commemorative flower because of its mention in the then popular poem by Lt. Col. John McCrae: "...In Flanders Fields where poppies blow between the crosses, row on row..."
     On Memorial Day, America remembers the courage exhibited on the battlefields, the lives sacrificed for an ideal, and those left broken and lonely by the destructiveness of war.  And on this day it is fitting that Americans offer sincere prayers that never again shall war stalk across the earth, bringing its incalculable toll of destruction, suffering, and death.

IV. NUGGETS OF NOURISHMENT... A Memorial Day Sermon Outline

Title: A Day of Remembrance
Text: Romans 5: 6-8

Introduction: This Memorial Day weekend, we as a nation take time to remember.  What we call Memorial Day in the United States is called "Remembrance Day" in England.  This reflects the thought of the devastation of a whole generation experienced in England during WWI.  None of us intends to forget those to whom we owe so much...but it is human and so easy to forget.  In the spirit of  "remembering" let us think of those men and women who are deceased and sacrificed their lives for the tree of freedom. Let us today...

I. Remember Those Who Risked Their Lives For Us...

II. Remember Those Who Lost Their Lives For Us...

III. Remember The One Who Gave His Life For Us All...(Christ)

Conclusion:

V. QUOTES FOR MOTHER'S DAY...

1. "It was my sainted mother who taught me a devotion to God and a love of country, which have ever sustained me in many lonely and bitter moments of decision in distant lands.  To her I yield anew a son's reverent thanks for her guidance on a path of duty as God gave me the light to see that duty." General Douglas MacArthur, WWII military leader in the Pacific.

2. An Irish quote... "the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world..."

3. A mother's advice to President Andrew Jackson.  "...In this world you will have to make your way.  To do that, you must have friends.  You can make friends by being honest, and you can keep them by being steadfast.  You must keep in mind that friends worth having will in the long run expect as much from you as they give to you...Avoid quarrels as long as you can without yielding to imposition, but sustain your manhood always... Never wound the feelings of others. Never broker wanton outrage upon your own feelings.  If you ever have to vindicate your feelings, or defend your honor, do it calmly.  If angry at first, wait till your wrath cools before you proceed." (quote from Sunshine Magazine (May 1959)

4. "The future destiny of a child is the work of a mother..." Napoleon Bonaparte.

5. "Mother is the name of God in the lips and hearts of little children..." Thackeray

6. "The death of a mother is the first sorrow wept without her..." A tombstone message


Wednesday, April 12, 2017

APRIL EDITION... Wonderful Words of Life...

 

Issue 7  WONDERFUL WORDS OF LIFE... APRIL EDITION

by Dr. Keith J. Wise

I. Introduction for April... 

    April is a month of new beginnings.  The snows of winter really begin to disappear in most of the United States, and the calendar for  2017  look to the celebration of Easter or Resurrection Sunday.  But as I have said before, Easter brings with it a preparation of profound importance.  The farmer begins to think about his soil, the taxes must be sent in if not earlier, and calendars are checked and scheduled for camps and vacation and special events.  In this issue we will proclaim the never ending and wonderful message of Easter and the resurrection.  We must prepare through study and meditation, which some call Lent, to open our hearts and allow the "washing of the word.." as Jesus noted in John 15. Shortly before His Ascension, Christ reminded the disciples concerning some of the things he had taught them. They as with us must be reminded.  He brought to their attention the truth that "...all things must needs be fulfilled, which are written in the law of Moses, and the Prophets, and the Psalms, concerning me." (Luke 24:44)

II. Why it Still Matters... The Resurrection

     When you receive this study on this blog, you will have a few weeks to prepare yourself for the celebration of the Resurrection Sunday.  The history of the Church proclaiming the message of resurrection is powerful and meaningful and has changed world history and civilization.  The sign of the resurrection was meant to set Jesus apart from anyone else who ever lived, and it would designated Him the Son of God. (Romans 1:4)  He was so determined to leave this impact, knowing how fickled and quick men forget events, that there are "post resurrection" appearances to sear this truth into the record.  There were eyewitness accounts and people whom Jesus appeared to alive over a forty day period after His public crucifixion.  Writing about A.D. 56, the apostle Paul mentions the fact that more than 500 people had witnessed the resurrected Christ at one time and most were still living when he wrote. (I Cor. 15:6)
There have been any number of strong defenses from many individuals both scholars to the illiterate. They have come to the simple but profound truth that Jesus did in fact rise from the dead.  Of the many that could be cited, would be a man by the name of Frank Morrison.  Frank was an agnostic journalist, who attempted to write a book refuting the resurrection of Christ. This has happened before and since to those who have been curios and honest inquirers.  Morrison shared and described what happened to him. "It is not that the facts altered, for they are recorded imperishably in the monuments and in the pages of human history.  But the interpretation to be put on the facts underwent a change." (Who Moved the Stone? Zondervan, 1971)
     Morrison boiled down his conclusions to groups of people that surround the resurrection story.  There were the Romans, the Jews or Jewish leaders, and the disciples.  The Romans would have had no reason to steal the body, since they wanted to keep the peace in Palestine.  They were not at all interested in some sort of grassroots uprising or revolution.  This would came later in the Great Jewish War(A.D.66-70) some forty years later, and prophesied by Jesus in Matthew 24.  They had a policy of keeping the provinces as quiet as possible, and the stealing of this Jewish rabbi's body would not have accomplished this goal.  The Jews or Jewish leaders would not have taken the body, because the last issue they desired was a clear proclamation of resurrection. Remember, they are the ones who asked for a guard to be placed. (Matthew 27)  Finally, the disciples were at this point a frightened and dishearten bunch of followers. If they had stolen the body and committed such a ruse, their later posture of honest proclamation which cost them their lives, would have been a senseless lie.  Morrison, along with countless others through the ages came to the most evident and apparent conclusion, that Jesus had risen from the dead.  Not only had He done so, but witnesses had see Him. This event was not a matter of the brief conclusion of His earthly ministry. Remarkably, He fulfilled the prophecies of the Old Testament of Messiah which furthermore provided the evidence for the apostolic message on the day of Pentecost. Jerusalem would be where Peter preached the first sermon with an empty tomb within walking distance. (Acts 2) Later, Peter will at the end of his life, in reference to the Transfiguration in II Peter 1:16, captures the whole sentiment of the resurrection, by conclusively saying "...For we did not follow cleverly devised tales when we made known to you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of His majesty."
     Beloved, we have a reason for our faith, and a purpose set before our eyes in these day of irrational skepticism.  The next time you stand next to the casket of your loved one at the time of their passing, you will thank God and the Lord Jesus Christ for the resurrection.  History tells us the early Christians would gather on the Lord's Day and the Evangelist or Pastor would declare, "HE IS RISEN!!!"  The congregation would then resound as one voice together, "HE IS RISEN INDEED!!!"

III. DID YOU KNOW?  ... Resulting Facts of the Resurrection..

     If we examine the results of the resurrection after the gospels we see a remarkable result of cause and effect.  Unknown to many Christians is that fact that I Corinthians 15 is the great treatise of the resurrection for the Church.  Its implication is for us who by our faith and obedience have acquired our salvation from the Lord.  Here are some implications of such a great savior, salvation and hope in the resurrection from I Corinthians 15.
1. "If there is no resurrection of the dead, then Christ is not risen..." (vs. 13) No Resurrection, No Savior.
2. "And if Christ is not risen, then our preaching is in vain..." (vs. 14) No Resurrection, Nothing to Preach.
3. "...and your faith is also vain," (vs.14) No Resurrection, our Faith is Vain.
4. "Yes, and we are found to be false witnesses of God; because we have testified of God that he raised up Christ: who he did not raise up if it be said the dead do not rise" (vs. 15) If Christ did not Rise, then the Apostles and Prophets were Liars. 
5. "For if the dead did not rise, then Christ did not rise..." (vs. 16) The origin of he Resurrection is Christ...His is the source and proves Christianity and the Scriptures with it.
6. "And if Christ is not raised, your faith is in vain." (vs. 17) No Resurrection, No one to Trust.
7. "You are still in your sins." (vs. 17) No Resurrection, No Forgiveness of Sin.
8. "Then they which have died ("fallen asleep") in Christ are perished." (vs. 18)  If Christ did not Rise, Neither will Anyone Else. 
9. "If in this life we only have hope in Christ, we are of all men the most miserable." (vs. 19) If there is no Resurrection, then Christians are Worse Off than Sinners.


III. NUGGETS OF NOURISHMENT... An Easter Sermon... The Day When Death Died.

Text: I Corinthians 15: 20-26

Introduction: Resurrection Sunday is a day of celebration.  On this day Christianity celebrates the day Christ rose from the tomb and vanquished death in many ways not totally understandable to us in this lifetime.  In reality for us, death is a fact.  We have all buried someone in the local cemetery, but our faith commands our heart and mind.  Death is a foe; but death is a defeated foe.  In the most triumphant terms the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ defeated death.  The power of death was defeated in Christ's resurrection in the following ways.

I. The Resurrection of Jesus Christ Defeats Death's Keeping Power...
    A. Jesus willingly laid down His life. (John 10:18)
    B. Jesus is the first fruits. (I Cor.15:20)
    C. Jesus is the last Adam. (I Cor.15:22)
    D. Eyewitness accounts affirm the resurrection. (I Cor.15:8; I Cor.15:14-15)

II. The Righteous Second Coming of Jesus Christ Defies Death's Killing Power...(I Cor.15:51-52)
    A. I Thessalonians 4:16-17; Mark 13:32-37

III. The Reign of Jesus Christ Destroys Death's Kingly Power...
    A. Death had a dominion (Rom.5:14) Jesus destroyed that domain!!
    B. Consider: II Timothy 1:10; I Cor. 15:54-57; I Cor. 15:25-26

Conclusion:  Beloved, death has been swallowed up in victory.  Because He Lives... we to shall live.  Claim the resurrection today and every Lord's day for your life.