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Friday, March 14, 2014

Brown's Daily Word 3-14-14

    Praise the Lord for this Fantastic Friday.  Jessie and Tom are coming home for the weekend.  Laureen will be for the weekend too.  We are excited and are very grateful to Jesus our Lord. Those of you live in the area join for our Friday Evening Television outreach this evening at 7 PM on Time Warner Cable  channel 4.  On Saturday at 5:30 PM, we will gather at Wesley on 1000 Day Hollow Road for a Spring Celebration with great Fellowship, Food, and Friendship.  Join us.  We will meet for worship at Union Center UMC at 8:30 and 11:00 AM, at 9:50 for the Sunday School hour and at 9:30 for worship at Wesley.  Plan to be in the House of the Lord wherever you might be.  "All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name".
    One of the powerful witness and faith Statements is found in the words, "I am not saying this because I am in need, for I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances". (Philippians 4:11)

  So many of us are not contented.  We look longingly to the past.  We look yearningly toward the future.  We are unhappy in the now.  In the process, we miss out on life's great possibilities of the present; we  become dissatisfied.

    Walter Kerr, in his book, "The Decline of Pleasure", analyzed the discontentment of our age.  He pierced through the superficiality of much we do.  He noted that the very things that we do that should be pleasurable for us are void of joy because they are being used as a means to an end.  We do not treat them as enjoyable in and of themselves.  He wrote, "We are all of us compelled to read for profit, party for contacts, lunch for contracts, bowl for unity, drive for mileage, gamble for charity, go out for the evening for the greater glory of municipality, and stay home for the weekend to rebuild the house."

    What a rat race life can become! Sadly enough, many of us Christians are caught up in this same restlessness.  We, too, become discontented.  Contentment, however, is not based on the outward circumstances of life.  The Apostle Paul, for instance, He is a good example of contentment despite adversity.  He was financially insolvent, so when he received a gift from the church at Philippi he wrote back expressing his appreciation for their money.  He said, "I rejoice greatly in the Lord that at last you have renewed your concern for me.  Indeed, you have been concerned, but you had no opportunity to show it" (Phil. 4:10).  Then he paused,and shared words of caution, "I am not saying this because I am in need, for I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances.  I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty.  I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want" (Philippians 4:11-12).  Paul did not reach this contentment overnight that caused him to say, "...for I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances" (Philippians 4:11

    Contentment is not fatalism!  True contentment is founded on a relationship with God in the person of Jesus Christ.  In the words of Lloyd Ogilvie, former US Senate Chaplain and one of my favorite preachers, "Paul's biography could be entitled 'Risky Christianity.'  Paul was willing to risk his safety, sacrifice his comfort, for the sake of Jesus Christ.  No cost was too great to hold him back from following Christ to the end.  He was a man in Christ.  Paul saw the risk of Christian living as being one he could not afford not to take.  He had to do it!"


    In the process, Paul uncovered an exciting principle.  That is, you and I are not really free persons until we are willing to lose everything.  There is no true contentment until we have been set free from the bondage of our possessions, our status, our reputation, our goals.  Jesus Christ became of no reputation for us.  It is written, "He emptied Himself".  In the process, He was free to purchase our salvation.  Now He sets us free to high-risk living, which doesn't depend on artificial props.

 In Christ,

   Brown

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