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Friday, August 17, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 8-17-12

Praise the Lord for another summer day. Summertime is an exciting time to serve the Lord with our time, talents, and treasures. The Lord has blessed us with an amazing week of Vacation Bible School, which is being held at the historic downtown First United Methodist Church, Endicott. It has been a amazing week of outreach to the children in downtown Endicott. We praise the Lord for so many who have been coming for the ministry through the VBS. I praise the Lord for the VBS staff and and all the dedicated workers who come each night serve the Lord by ministering to the children. It takes great devotion , great dedication, and deep commitment. Praise the Lord for the way He bestows joy in our hearts as we get and stay engaged in serving the Lord. I get excited about Jesus when His followers serve Him with great Joy and with great abandonment.
Some time ago I read about a Mount Everest expedition. As we all know, Mount Everest is a popular destination for mountain climbers, but that doesn’t mean it’s a safe place to be. It is not a tourist attraction like an amusement park. This mountain is an extremely dangerous place to climb. It has been said that the bodies of over 200 people are still up on the mountain, bodies of climbers who have died on the slopes of Mt. Everest. One climber noted: "There are times when you literally have to step over somebody’s body to get to the top,”

One of the most tragic deaths occurred about six years ago, in May of 2006. A 34 year old Englishman named David Sharp had managed a solo climb to top of Everest and was making his way back down when he began to suffer from hypothermia. He sat down and eventually he died there. As he lay dying 800 feet from one of the Camps on the mountain he was passed by 40 other climbers who were headed for the summit. Not one of those climbers made an attempt at a rescue.

Forty climbers left Sharp to die. Why, we wonder, could they let it happen? It was because they were on their way to top of the highest mountain in the world, a climb which had cost them many thousands of dollars for the privilege. If they had turned back at this point, they may never have made the summit. For this reason they just walked past the body of a man they figured would die anyway.

In Matthew 25 Jesus said that the Kingdom of Heaven (or the Church) is like a man who gave his servants a huge amount of money, called “talents”. The point the parable was, that each of these servants in the parable received a TASK they could do. Each of them was given something that the Master wanted taken care of. Each of the servants was given a responsibility the Master believed they could handle.

Why would Jesus tell the parable that way? Why would He teach us that the 5 talent servant pleased the master equally to the 2 talent servant? He was showing us that God doesn’t look at your “talent”. He looks at what you DO with that talent.

Some people say:
I can’t teach.
I can’t sing.
I can’t play an instrument.
I can’t do missionary work.
I can’t work on computers.
I can’t cook.
I don’t have a lot of money to give to the church.
I can’t do this… or I can’t do that.
The list goes on and on and on. They think they don’t have much to offer God because they CAN’T DO the BIG talent things. They don’t have showy or impressive gifts. The parable, however, is saying that God doesn’t care about what you CAN’T DO. He cares about what you CAN do.

This parable is essentially telling us:
Don’t just sit there… do something!!!
Find something!!!
Create something!!!
Do ANYTHING!!!
But don’t just sit there and do NOTHING!

In the Mount Everest story, the 40 people were so focused on the summit of the Mount Everest they left a man to die. Just a few days after David Sharp died alone on Mount Everest another team of climbers led by Andrew Brash of Calgary came upon a man named Lincoln Hall. Hall wasn’t dead. He wasn’t sleeping. He was just sitting there cross-legged at the edge of 10,000 foot drop, changing his shirt. He had his suit unzipped to the waist, his arms out of the sleeves. He had no hat, no gloves, no sunglasses, no oxygen mask, no sleeping bag, no mattress, and no food or water bottle. He just sat there - without proper equipment and barely clothed – and yet ALIVE.”

Brash and his team abruptly abandoned their climb to the top of Mount Everest, and shared their oxygen with him until a rescue team could take him back down the Mountain. They didn’t make it to the summit, but they did something far more valuable as they saved life of a man who was confused and dying.

Those 40 climbers who left David Sharp to die have met with nothing but excuses and criticism, but the climbers who rescued Lincoln Hall met with praise and admiration… as well they should.

God wants to give us responsibilities within His church, and He watches to see how seriously we take those tasks. We must always remember the reason God gave us those tasks was to ultimately use them to reach the lost for Christ and find and rescue the dying.
In Christ,
Brown
Family Carnival & Chicken BBQ @ Union Center UMC
Public Event · By UCUMC IGNITE YOUTH GROUP Saturday August 18,2012
Time : 12 noon though 4.00 PM

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 8-14-12

Praise the Lord for this new day in His Kingdom. Praise the Lord that He offers every thing we need to live well and abundantly indeed, for "His divine power has given us every thing we need for life and for righteousness". The Lord blessed us with a great evening at our VBS last night at the First United Methodist Church, Endicott. We praise the Lord for the energetic staff and for the workers who love the Lord and who love to serve Him with joy. The Lord blessed us with so many children from the neighborhood. We are claiming all these children for Jesus and for His Kingdom.
Jesus loved children. He still loves children. William Barclay commented that we become more like Jesus when we love children with a deep passion and love. We read in Mark 10: "People were bringing little children to Jesus to have him touch them, but the disciple rebuked them. When Jesus saw this, he was indignant. He said to them, 'Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these. I tell you the truth; anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it.’ And he took the children in his arms, and put his hands on them and blessed them” (Mark 10:13-16).
In the ancient world, children had no status. Back then a person could literally throw children away by exposing unwanted infants at birth. There is a famous letter written in 1 B.C. by a poor laborer to his pregnant wife in Alexandria, advising her to keep the child if it was boy and to cast it out if it was a girl. This still happens in India today. The unscrupulous would collect exposed children and raise them to be gladiators or prostitutes and even disfigure them to enhance their value as beggars. Such was the world that Jesus lived in—a world that didn’t have time for children.
We may think that we are much different than the disciples (who tried to keep the children away from Jesus), but maybe more of us resemble them than we would like to admit. Sometimes we hinder children from coming to Jesus by our attitude—“Children are a bother”. Jesus values children just as much as adults.
It is recorded in Mark 10 that “People were bringing little children to Jesus to have him touch them” (v. 13 a). Notice that it does not say “parents” were bringing them to Jesus. It is likely that most of these people were parents, but probably some were not. Bringing children to Jesus is for everyone, not just parents. Some of the greatest ministers to children are those who never had children. “But the disciples rebuked them” (v. 13 b). “Them” refers to the people bringing the children to Jesus. We are not certain why this is so. Perhaps they thought Jesus was too busy or too tired to be bothered with children.
“When Jesus saw this, he was indignant” (v. 14 a). In other words, he was “angry or annoyed at the unfairness of unreasonableness of somebody or something”. The King James Version says “he was much displeased.” Jesus was not just a little upset; He was very angry (in a good way).
Jesus indignant because He loves the little children. To Him, they are not a bother, they are not unimportant, and they are not a waste of time. Jesus wants to bless the little children. How old were these children? Here we read that they were “little children.” Some of them were small enough for Jesus to pick them up in His arms. Luke wrote in His Gospel that some of them were “babies” (Luke 18:15).
It is still true today that Jesus invites children to come to Him. In fact, children are more likely to come to Jesus. In Luke 14:23 Jesus said, “Let the little children come to me.”
Surveys conducted by the Barna Research Group of Ventura, California, have determined that if a person does not accept Jesus Christ as Savior before the age of 14, the likelihood of every doing become increasingly slim. Based on a nationwide (U.S.) representative sampling of more than 4200 young people and adults, the survey results show that people from ages 5 through 13 have a 32% probability of accepting Christ as their Savior. Young people from the ages of 14 through 18 have just a 4% likelihood of doing so, while adults (ages 19 through death) have only a 6% probability of making that choice (Nelson’s Complete Book of Stories, Illustrations & Quotes, pp. 99-100). The older a person gets without becoming a Christian, the less likely they are to ever do so. [I head that 83% of those who come to Christ do so before the age of 18.]
One of our main strategies as a church should be to reach young people for Christ. Children have their whole lives to live for Jesus.
In Christ,
Brown

Monday, August 13, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 8-13-12

Praise the Lord for another brilliant and beautiful day in in His Kingdom. The Lord blessed us with great day of worship and praise yesterday. Jessica and Tom returned back to Philly after being away in Europe for over two weeks. Laureen visited one of her friends at the Canadian border and attended worship there with her friend and family. We spoke to our granddaughter Micah in Boston this weekend. She and her brother are coming to spend a week with us in a couple of weeks. We are excited. Sunita and Andy are coming home for a week this weekend. We are planning for some camping and hiking.
We are launching our VBS ministry today. It will be held at the historic First United Methodist Church, Endicott. It will start at 6 PM nightly and conclude at 8:30 PM. It is our missional outreach for the children in downtown Endicott. We are excited and thrilled about this open door the Lord has given us to minister to the children. Our VBS staff are ready for action. Our VBS will culminate with a community wide carnival to be held at the Union Center Methodist Church on Saturday, August 18 from 12- 4 PM, along with a chicken BBQ. This will be a great time of fellowship for the whole family, including pony rides and games.
We watched the Olympics with joy and gratitude. THE USA won the most number of medals in each category, gold, silver, and bronze. This week I read about a fascinating research study done by Vicki Medvec, a professor at Northwestern University, who studied Olympic medalists. She discovered that Bronze medalists were happier than Silver medalists. According to Medvec, Silver medalists tended to focus on how close they came to winning gold so they weren’t satisfied with silver. Bronze medalists tended to focus on how close they came to not winning a medal at all so they were just happy to be on the medal stand at all.

I think that study reveals a fascinating facet of human nature: our focus determines our reality. How we feel is not determined by objective circumstances. If that was the case, Silver medalists would be happier than Bronze medalists because they had an objectively better result. Instead, the way we feel is determined by our subjective focus. In other words, our internal attitudes are more important than our external circumstances.

John Milton said, “The mind is its own place, and in itself, can make a Heaven out of Hell, a Hell of Heaven.” All of us know people who can find something good to focus on even in the worst of circumstances. All of us also know someone who can find something bad to focus on even in the best of circumstances. We tend to see what we’re looking for.
I think there are two basic types of people in the world: complainers and worshippers. Complainers can always find something to complain about. Worshippers can always find something to praise God about. In Acts 16, Paul and Silas were in a prison cell in Philippi. Paul had cast a demon out of a fortune-teller. Her master did not like it because she lost the ability to predict the future so he had Paul and Silas arrested. Acts 16:22 says, “A mob quickly formed against Paul and Silas, and the city officials ordered them stripped and beaten with wooden rods. They were severely beaten, and then they were thrown into prison. The jailer was ordered to make sure they didn’t escape, so he took no chances but put them into the inner dungeon and clamped their feet in the stocks.” Their backs were bleeding from their beating, leaving the men black and blue all over.
The Bible says, “Around midnight, Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the other prisoners were listening.” They were worshipping.
Worshipping is taking our eyes off of our external circumstances and focusing on God. In order to worship we must stop focusing on what’s wrong with us or with our circumstances. We need to start to focus on what’s right with God.
Paul and Silas could have complained about their circumstances, which were certainly bad, but they made a choice to worship God in spite of their external circumstances.
Paul and Silas knew the secret of true, heartfelt worship, which restores spiritual equilibrium. It helps us regain our perspective. It enables us to find something right to praise God about even when everything seems to be going wrong.
One of my all time favorite books is Man’s Search for Meaning by Victor Frankl, a Holocaust survivor who wrote about his experiences in a Nazi concentration camp. Everything was taken away from these prisoners. They were stripped of their clothing, their pictures, and their personal belongings. Even their names were taken, the each was given a number instead. Frankl was number 119,104.
Everything was taken away except one thing. Frankl said, “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of human freedoms—to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances.”
Philippians 4:8, written by Paul, is an amazing passage. It lists eight premeditated cognitive commitments. He said, “Whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.”
In other words, a worshipper can always find a reason to praise the Lord.
Worship set Paul and Silas free physically. It is worship that will set us free emotionally and spiritually. Worship sets off a chain reaction. The prison doors fly open. The chains break free.
Let us keep a gratitude journal this week. Let us write down something every day that we can be grateful for. It is a spiritual discipline. Psalm 103:2 says, “Praise the Lord and forget not all his benefits.”
In Christ,
Brown