Living Faith Alliance Church

Lust, The Worst Black Hole!

The other day I was talking with a friend, and she was relating to me how sad she felt at the fact that businesses in our community, directly or indirectly, play down the significance of Thanksgiving—almost like we are forced to think now about Christmas shopping before we even get to the table of gratitude. 

I believe what my friend was describing points to a larger reality that characterizes us as humans beings. One little word can summarize it: “lust.” 

From a biblical point of view, I see that lust (desire, craving) fills the pages of the Bible as if God wants to make it very obvious to us that we are people who regularly lust after something, be it pleasure, comfort, beauty, respect, fame, goods, relationships, praise, clothes, looks, admiration, affirmation, happiness, freedom, money, peace, fulfillment, balance, and the list goes on and on.

As I reflect, I think I am convinced that lust has come and is here to stay. An unwanted guest that has permanency in our hearts. How did I formulated this thought? It comes right from James 1:14, and its context offers us a clear picture. In this case, lust is already present at each temptation we experience in life.

Contrary to popular thought, temptation brings out of us something that already exists inside of us. The apostle James tells us that we are not tempted by God, but rather we are tempted as we are lured and enticed by our own lust. So in reality, circumstances—good or bad—set us up to bring the lust already residing inside of us out into the light. So lust is already inside of us and it is here to stay.

Lust is like a black hole. You can feed it a little bit of this or a little bit of that, but it is never satisfied. Lust will keep searching for more, better, greater and more fulfilling. 

I am thankful that God has provided ways for us to not live hopelessly in the face of lust.

He commands us to practice contentment and gratitude (Ephesians 5:20).

He provides us with something far better than lust, abundant grace (Hebrews 4:16).

He illustrates for us, in Jesus, the highest forms of joy and fulfillment there can ever be (John 4:34).

He is powerful to transform our hearts so that we can live out new desires that honor Him (Jeremiah 32:39).

So whether you are at the store, opening your mail or checking your emails, don’t allow the appeal to your lusts to grab you by the neck lest you fall into the black hole!

—Diego Cuartas

Diego.png

A Story of Worship

I had the experience of worshiping alongside many women this past Friday at our church’s first “Women Encountering God” worship night. In all honesty, the night felt overwhelming to me (and maybe not in the way you’re assuming). I was really moved by God on display in the testimonies given. How they pointed to His goodness, greatness, graciousness, and gloriousness. How He mends the broken hearted, sets the captives free, delivers from darkness, comforts those who mourn, and gives beauty, joy and a garment of praise in return. I felt such a sense of joy at hearing the work of the Lord in individual lives.

It felt very emotional to be in a room of women singing praises to God with loud and joyful voices. I saw women worshiping with big, expressive postures of praise, and women worshipping with gentle, reverent postures of praise. I saw women embracing one another and praying with one another. It was all so beautiful.

These were evidences of other people experiencing God, but that wasn’t what overwhelmed me that night. I was overwhelmed by the very intimate and personal presence of the Holy Spirit that I experienced. God impressed on me a sense of His holiness, His majesty, and His worth. I had a sense of the picture that Isaiah paints in Isaiah 6 of a majestic God in His throne room, radiating glory and being worshiped by heavenly beings with a song of “Holy, holy holy is the LORD of hosts; the whole earth is full of His glory!”.

I’m including a link to an article that I read about what happens when we worship. CLICK HERE to read this article. I think that they do a good job of explaining what it really is, and why it’s important.

Take the time to read this embedded article and think about what your experience of worship is.

Does it lead you to a greater focus on God?

Does it lead you to more intimacy with God?

Does it ever lead you to a place of brokenness and repentance?

Does it have a lasting impact on you beyond the moment?

What would it look like for you to incorporate worship into the daily rhythms of your life?

I pray that you find quiet moments in the busyness of God to worship and align your heart to an upward focus, especially in this season of life where busyness seems to increase.

—Lindsay Thompson

Lindsay T.png

A Serial Forgetter

Turkey+Sandwich+2.jpg

 “I have a lump!” Mama wailed frantically. “Call the doctor!”

Mama’s eyes, brimming with fear and tears, pleaded with me. She would have been pleased with a 9-1-1 response, but I, quite suspicious by nature, needed a bit more information. Guiding Mama back to the safety and comfort of her old lounge chair, I gently asked her to show me what had upset her.

“This!” Mama cried. She ripped open the snaps on her sweater and gingerly rested her hand on an oddly shaped mass protruding from her chest. Feigning genuine concern, I carefully untucked Mama’s shirt and, with the skill of a surgeon, removed a take-out box filled with decaying leftovers. I stifled my amusement and declared Mama to be “healed,” assuring her she would get my bill in the morning.

Mama was not amused. Confused and frustrated, she fumed, “Who put that in there? I’ve been looking for that. Why did someone do that?” A rather lengthy battle ensued over the “lump.” Even though the food failed our sniff test, Mama adamantly insisted it not be wasted. Hoping she would eventually forget about it, I offered to put it in the refrigerator as a goodwill gesture, hoping to negotiate a lasting peace. Sighing, I went about my business.

Within minutes, Mama appeared again. “Help me,” she begged mournfully. Once again, Mama’s bulge extended awkwardly from her middle. I never heard or saw her sneak back into the kitchen to retrieve her week-old turkey sandwich. And why would she have crammed it right back in that very same spot under her clothing? How could she have forgotten so quickly that we had just been through all of this? But, with sympathy and reassurance this time, the surgical procedure was successfully repeated…four more times that afternoon. Every single time, Mama was worried then shocked and annoyed that some phantom food stuffer was relentlessly targeting her. It was a long day. Why didn’t I think to just throw the dumb Styrofoam container, reeking contents and all, out in the trash can? 

Why did my poor Mom have to suffer so from Alzheimer’s?

Why did it have to ravage her brain and rob her of who she was?

Why did it make her do such crazy, bizarre things?

Why did she have to forget everything…including me?

I think maybe that’s why I cling so tightly to Isaiah 49:13, 15 and 16.

 

 Sing for joy, O heavens, and exult, O earth;
    break forth, O mountains, into singing!
For the Lord has comforted his people
    and will have compassion on his afflicted…

 “Can a woman forget her nursing child,
    that she should have no compassion on the son of her womb?
Even these may forget, yet I will not forget you.
 Behold, I have engraved you on the palms of my hands…”

My Heavenly Father promised me that HE will always remember me...even when my own dear Mama literally cannot. What a precious truth for me to cling to! Right next to the nail scars, the ultimate proof of His glorious love, He somehow has tenderly inscribed MY unimportant and insignificant name right there. Incredible! Unfathomable! He will never forget me.

And this begs a simple question. Do I remember Him?

Oh, how I want to live remembering HIM the way He so graciously remembers me! I don’t want to forget who I am because of Who He is to me and for me. I don’t want to walk through my days as a functional atheist, oblivious to His constant care and leading. I don’t want to essentially rule my tiny kingdom with no thought of my Creator, Sustainer, Savior, and King. I don’t want to be an ungrateful forgetter.

But, sadly, I often am. And I don’t have Alzheimer’s as an excuse.

This is what Paul Tripp has to say about our shameful forgetting propensity.  

It’s so easy to forget who you are in Christ and what you have been given as his child.  It’s so easy to shop horizontally for what you have already been given vertically. It’s so easy to give in to fear, to give way to shame, and to allow yourself to be weakened by guilt because you forget the present benefits of Jesus’s finished work. It’s so easy, in the hardships of life, to forget that nothing is powerful enough to separate you from God’s love. When you are struggling, it’s so easy to forget that if God gave you his Son, he will also give you everything else you need. It’s so easy to fail to live in light of the fact that Jesus didn’t die just for your past forgiveness (praise God that he did) or your future resurrection (what hope!), but also for everything you are facing in the here and now.

It’s so easy to forget that every trial sent your way is sent by a Savior of grace as a tool of grace to advance the work of grace in your heart and life….It’s so easy to forget that God really does live inside you in the powerful convicting, protecting, and enabling presence of the Holy Spirit. It’s so easy to forget that God loves and accepts you no less on your worst day than he does on your best day. (New Morning Mercies)

Yes, it’s too easy for me, when my world is in a mess or when I am exhausted, to wonder if God is good and if He cares and if He is in control. I simply forget Him and try to fix it myself. Sometimes I wonder if He is listening or if He is really near. And I sometimes, when I look around at the apparent ease of others, foolishly worry that maybe He has forgotten me…just like my Mama did.

But then I think of my verse in Isaiah….and a hundred other promises my Father has written to me in His Word. He will not forget me. He has written my name right there on His hand as a reminder. I rehearse over and over in my head all the times and ways He has come through for me over the decades since I have called Him my Lord. How sweet to recall His faithfulness and remember His works on my behalf...and for so many around me.

And I meet with my dear church family on any given Sunday morning and am reminded in a myriad of ways through the corporate worship and proclamation of God’s Word of Who my Father is, of all I have been given, and of Whose I am. I remember. I am comforted. I am blessed. I am grateful.

My poor Mama couldn’t remember where she put her lunch. She couldn’t remember her own name. She couldn’t remember me. She was a serial forgetter. But I am certain, as she sits at the feet of her beloved Savior in heaven right now, she isn’t forgetting Him!  Ever again.

She’s now a serial rememberer.

I want to be too. Don’t you?

—Eileen Hill

Eileen - Blog Photo.png


Flashing Headlights

So I’m driving to work down Cohansey Road. It’s 5:45 in the morning. It’s dark. Really dark. If you know anything about that road, it’s dark at night. No one behind me, I don’t see anyone ahead of me. “Who in their right mind would be doing anything but sleeping right now?” Over the hill ahead of me this car is coming toward me in the on-coming lane. As they approach, they flash their headlights at me, and I look at my dash to see if my high beams are on. Nope. I just give them a little high beam flash so they know they gotta deal with the lights the way they are. So they flash me again! OK! I let it go and they go past me. I wonder what that was all about. I crest over the next hill and AHHHHH!!!!!!  There’s a BIG deer standing three feet from the white line looking at me like it owns the woods and I don’t. I’m on the brakes, swerve to the other side while honking the horn, do anything I can avoid that mess of dealing with the body shop and insurance. The deer never moved. All is good. Except for my pulse, but that got better.

The person in the on-coming car was trying to warn me of a possible life changing event. Ignore the warning, not be ready and I could have been looking for a new vehicle. Their flashing headlights were a warning.

As I got to work, I was thinking about what that person did, and it dawned on me about the messages that Jesus gave to people about the future things to come. Interestingly, those people would only transfer the message to future people. 2000 years later we tend to let those messages get lost in what we know. In Matthew 24 & 25 there are many warnings that Jesus gave us about His coming. He methodically gave us lessons that show different ways His coming could affect us.

With the fig tree. How do we see it’s near?

Noah was “flashing headlights” to everyone he came in contact with. Who survived?  

The faithful and unfaithful servant. Who was rewarded?

The ten virgins. Who was ready?

In Matthew 24:42. “Watch.” And 44. “Be ready” is the theme.

 You could think of these chapters as “constantly flashing headlights.” 

I encourage you to take some time and read Matthew 24 & 25 and ask yourself ,“What is Jesus saying to me?”
Are we living the life that is “Ready?”
Are our lamps full of oil?

Are we on the Ark?”

—Brian Rainey

Brian Rainey.jpg

Powered by Squarespace