Poll: Almost Half In U.S. Creationist

Lords Prayer SC Poll: Almost half in U.S. creationist

PRINCETON, N.J., June 2 (UPI) – The percentage of U.S. residents who believe God created human beings less than 10,000 years ago has changed little in the past 30 years, a Gallup poll says.

In a report Friday, the Gallup organization said 46 percent held that view in the most recent poll. In 1982, when Gallup first asked the question, the percentage was 44 percent and the average over the years has been 45 percent.

The poll was conducted for USA Today.

Almost one-third, 32 percent, said humans have evolved over millions of years with divine guidance, down from an average of 37 percent. Another 15 percent say that evolution took place without God’s guidance.

Read more at UPI.com.

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Original Poem: Is It Time To Come Home, Lord?

Jesus SC Original Poem: Is It Time To Come Home, Lord?

Is it time to come home, Lord? Have I done all that I can?
You gave me the voice. You gave me the drive.
But no one will listen. They are blind if they thrive.
They don’t sense the Evil that gives toys and drugs minds.

Young people are covetous; they want more; yet even when poor, they are idle.
They want others to supply their needs—to grant them their desires.
Young women kill babies in their womb; they want pleasure—not the pain.
They don’t understand their loss—don’t know how much they’d obtain.

Corruption rules this world now—through envy, hate, and greed.
Our leaders flaunt their power, while their hungry cry and plead.
Supremacy is their motive, o’er the people, and for fame.
They’re Almighty in their mirrors—sashaying with evil gain.

Each country is in chaos. Mobs destroy—blood runs in streets.
Despots bomb and kill those who protest, to maintain their dominance.
The poor want equal wealth as those who worked and toiled for years.
If not, greedy leaders will steal it—and make poor and rich simply peers.

Earthly crises are mounting too, Lord—are they reprimands for our sins?
Earthquakes, tornadoes, floods and volcanoes—do they warn of a fiery end?
We’ve been told of these horrors before, Lord, but many doubt Your Holy Birth.
They’d have to forego self-indulgence, and honor You as their Savior borne.

We must fall to our knees and pray, Lord—acknowledge we are Your creations.
“Revelations” in the Holy Bible, the Mayans, and Nostradamus, too,
Told of plagues and fiery monsters to come. They’ll destroy those who won’t repent.
Those who don’t admit their guilt or sins will soon reap what they have sown.

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Today Is A National Day Of Prayer!

Jesus Resurrection Life SC Today is a National Day of Prayer!

Thursday, May 3, is an annual observance set aside by Congress as the National Day of Prayer.  It is a day for Americans to seek God’s guidance and blessing upon America and its leaders. On this day, millions of people from coast to coast will pray to God on behalf of this nation individually or in prayer services.

However, before we pray, it would be wise for us to review the conditions that were set by God in 2 Chronicles 7:14: “If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and change their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.”

“If My people who are called by My name” refers to the individual believer. God wants each of us to humble ourselves before Him, confess our sins, and change our wicked ways.

God does not always hear our prayers. Scriptural reasons for unanswered prayer include sinful living:

  • If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear. ( Psalm 66:18)
  • But your iniquities have separated you from your God; and your sins have hidden His face from you, so that He will not hear. (Isaiah 59:2)
  • Now we know that God does not hear sinners; but if anyone is a worshiper of God and does His will, He hears him. (John 9:31)
  • Whoever shuts his ears to the cry of the poor will also cry himself and not be heard. (Proverbs 21:13)

Prayer can be denied when we do nothing to help God in the answer. Once we have confessed our sins, we must turn from our wicked ways.

Moses learned about following through on prayer at the Red Sea. As Pharaoh approached,  Moses told the people, “Don’t be afraid. Just stand still and watch the Lord rescue you today. The Egyptians you see today will never be seen again. The Lord himself will fight for you. Just stay calm.”

Then the Lord said to Moses, “Why are you crying out to me? Tell the people to get moving! Pick up your staff and raise your arm over the sea.” (Genesis 14:13-16)

God opened the Red Sea only after Moses and the Israelites acted on His command to get going! He promises us in 2 Chronicles 7:14 to forgive us and heal our land when we repent and change our wicked ways.

May we believers live our lives in such a way that we can confidently proclaim, “Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord.” (Psalm 33:12) May America bless God, and may God bless America.

Debbie Leininger

NW Illinois Regional Coordinator

National Day of Prayer Task Force

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Why A Christian’s Fear Of Death Is Irrational

Jesus SC Why A Christian’s Fear of Death is Irrational

We often fear what we don’t understand.  We fear what we have never experienced before.  A common fear nearly all of us struggle with is the fear of death. No one ever comes back from the grave to tell us about their death experience so it remains a great mystery.

My six year old son was about to drift off to sleep the other night when he called out to me, “Daddy, there is a face staring at me from my closet.”  I looked in his closet and sure enough, there was an Iron Man mask staring outward.  So, I shoved it deeper in his closet and covered it up with some of his other toys and my son drifted off to sleep.  The fear of death is the monster in every closet.  We don’t want to talk about it or think about it.  We prefer to shove it back in the dark recesses of our mind and pretend it’s not there.

We were visiting our friend’s house recently.  My wife, Shannon, and I were talking to his elderly mother.  Shannon has an uncanny ability to discern when others are troubled.  I was surprised when she asked ‘Gran’ if she was alright. Gran replied, “Oh, I’m a little discouraged.”   “Why, what’s wrong,” my wife asked.  “Well, I took my friend shopping yesterday and she just wasn’t doing so well, you know, forgetful and tired acting.”  So I asked her, “How old is your friend?”  “Oh, she is 95”, she said in a matter-of-fact manner.  “How old are you,” I asked.  “I’m only 92,” she boasted.  I sensed Gran was denying old age and she seemed to be unfettered by the fear of death.

Death is the shadow in everyone’s future.  There are many things we don’t know in life.  Some people dedicate their entire lives to the discovery of things we know nothing of.  There are so many uncertainties in life, but we are all certain of one thing; “for the living know that they will die.” (Ecclesiastes 9:5) But “no man knows when his hour will come.” (9:12)

Man’s first experience with death was perpetrated by Cain.  Imagine the pain and horror the first family felt as they witnessed the death of their son, their brother.  They were stunned by the solemn realization, as they looked on the dead body of Abel, that “it is appointed unto man once to die.” (Hebrews 9:27)    David wrote of this universal fear when he penned Psalm 23:4  “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; For you are with me; Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me.”

When a Christian fears death he is being irrational.  A Christian’s belief in the deity of Christ eliminates his fear of death.  Jesus didn’t mince any words when it came to proclaiming that he was divine.  The Jewish leaders came to him and asked, “Who do you think you are?”  (John 8:53)  “Aren’t we right in saying that you are a Samaritan and demon-possessed?”  Calling Jesus a Samaritan was the equivalent of using the “N” word in today’s culture.  Jesus was willing to risk his life to tell them the truth.

“I am not possessed by a demon,” he said.  (John 8:49)  “I tell you the truth, before Abraham was, I am!” (John 8:58)  He was declaring to them that he and the Father were one in their eternal nature.  They were enraged by this truth and commenced to pick up stones and tried to kill him but he escaped.

Jesus said something even more shocking earlier in this passage.  He clearly proclaimed his divine nature to them.  “If you knew me you would know my Father.” (John 8:19)  Jesus had made very plain to them that he and his Father were in perfect agreement as to what his purpose was when he took on humanity and came into this world.  “For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him”.  (John 3:17)   His enemies were shocked that Jesus would claim to be God,  they were astonished that he claimed power to bring salvation to their souls.  This was a day for them to remember because they had never heard any man utter such outrageous things.

Perhaps most shocking of all, Jesus told them that if they believe in his divinity, if they accepted the fact that the only path to salvation was through Jesus Christ, the son of God, “I tell you the truth, if anyone keeps my word…(long drum roll here)… he will never see death!”  (John 8:51)  What?  “Did they hear him right?”  Yes.  Jesus told them that his divinity qualified him to be their Savior, if they would believe, confess their sins and accept his gift of righteousness, they would never see death.

Keep in mind Jesus didn’t say, “You will never die,” he said, “You will never see death.”  When his opponents were trying to clarify what they had heard they changed it a bit by asking him, “Are you saying that if we keep your commandments we will never taste death?”  They substituted the word ‘taste’ for ‘see’ but Jesus never corrected them.

While they were speaking of physical death Jesus was speaking of spiritual death.  Jesus didn’t deny that all men would die physically.  Nevertheless, he was teaching them that at the point of physical death the soul leaves the body and ascends to another dwelling place.  The life of the soul continues uninterrupted by the physical death of the body.  This is all possible because Jesus laid down his life down for the sheep.  He arose from the dead, thereby, eliminating the sting of death for all those who believe in him.  He provided us an opportunity to be righteous.  He satisfied the cry of his Father’s pure heart for justice and he permanently shut the gates of hell to those who are stamped with his image.

Therefore, it is irrational for the Christian to fear death when Christ himself has taken away the sting (fear) of death and promised us eternal life.

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How A Christian Can Eliminate Fear

 

Jesus Resurrection Life SC How A Christian Can Eliminate Fear

Life was good for Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden.  It was a true paradise until Satan slithered into their lives.  They went into hiding after they had offended their Creator.  ”Then the Lord God called to the man and said to him, where are you?”  Its not like God didn’t know where they were, it was a preparation question by which God was about to reveal himself to them.  Adam replied, “I heard you in the garden, and I was afraid because I was naked; so I hid.”  Adam and Eve then revealed the sin in their hearts by participating in a blame game.

Fear can be paralyzing.  The sound of God’s movement in the garden was incapacitating.  It was heart stopping.  John Haggai said, “For many, fear has grown like a tree until it over shadows them from morning till night.”  Fear is probably the most destructive force of mankind.  Satan tempted Adam and Eve with the sin of pride and then the assaulted them with fear.

Fear is a leading health problem among Americans.  Fear and depression are like destructive twin sisters.  They can spawn ulcers, heart problems, liver and kidney disease in their wake.  Fear and worry are probably responsible for more deaths than all the wars combined.  “God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.” (2 Timothy 1:7)  If fear doesn’t come from God it must originate with Satan.  Satan unleashes fear upon us and then he “prowls around like a lion looking for someone to devour.” (1 Peter 5:8)  A.W. Tozer said, “Fear is of the flesh and panic is of the Devil.”

I am a Kentucky basketball fan and I recently enjoyed watching Kentucky plow to a national championship.  I noticed their intensity increased dramatically as they neared the end of each game they played.  I think Satan’s activity is increasing dramatically as the endgame draws near.  “But woe to the earth and the sea, because the devil has gone down to you!  He is filled with fury, because he knows that his time is short.”  (Revelation 12:12)

There are numerous verses in the Bible that admonish us to fear God.  “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” (Psalm 11:10)  There is not a single verse in the Bible that tells us to fear Satan.  When we have a reverential respect for the all-powerful God, our fear of Satan is erased like black marks on a dry erase board.

Fear is indelibly woven into the fabric of our culture.  We fear unemployment.  We fear poverty.  We fear an empty bank account.  We fear foreclosure.  Our anemic economy has generated a great fear that Medicare, Medicaid and our Social Security will one day be no longer available.  This spirit of fear is an evil spirit, it hounds us and torments us and it is born in hell.

I was very discouraged when I looked at the bottom line on this year’s tax return.   I owed the federal government a sizeable amount of money.  I owe money to the mortgage company but it doesn’t give rise to any fear.  I owe money to the dentist, I owe money to the Medical Center but these debts stir in me no fear.  For some reason, owing money to the U.S. Government produced a dreadful fear in me.  I began to imagine people pulling up in my driveway in black limousines, jumping out in Colombo style overcoats to serve me papers with Barack Obama’s name on them.  I painted a house during Spring Break to pay off our taxes and I’m relieved to say, “I don’t owe the U.S. Government one red cent.”

Ten years ago my wife and I left public schools to work in private Christian schools.  The move from public to private required we take a $20,000 to $30,000 combined pay cut.  We had no idea how we would pay our bills but we both felt strongly that God was calling us to teach in Christian schools where we could openly, daily proclaim the name of Christ.  I want to reveal, to the glory of God, that we have never missed a house payment, we have never missed a car payment and we’ve had more than enough food to eat since we decided to trust God for our needs.

If God is asking you to do something but you just can’t seem to crunch the numbers on it, don’t be smothered by a spirit of fear.  I boldly and confidently write these words, “If you are doing the bidding of God who ‘owns the cattle on a thousand hills’, (Psalm 50:10) he will take care of you.”

Over a hundred years ago, while her husband was away for several weeks on a preaching assignment, Civilla Martin wrote these words:

 

All you may need he will provide,

God will take care of you;

Nothing you ask will be denied,

God will take care of you.

 

No matter what may be the test,

God will take care of you;

Lean, weary one, upon His breast,

God will take care of you.

 

As a school teacher I really connected to a quote I read recently, “When you are going through something hard and wonder where God is, remember, the teacher is always quiet during the test.”

We often become arrogant about the things we have accumulated over the years.  We think we have earned those things.  We have what we have because God gave those things to us.  “Every good and perfect gift comes from above.” (James 1:17)

My brother, Dennis, has been a missionary to Japan for over thirty years.  He and his wife are packing their belongings and preparing to return to the states as I write these words.  They have experienced some severe health problems that forced them into early retirement from the mission field.  God spoke to Dennis’ heart when he was but a teen-ager about dedicating his life to the Japanese people.  Dennis obediently served God for all those years, depending on God and the goodwill of others to support his ministry.

I asked him the other day, “Dennis, what are you going to do now?  Your retirement plan is not enough to sustain you.  You are still buying a house.  Your wife has a mountain of medical bills to pay.  What are you going to do?”  His reply went something like this, “Kevin, God has taken care of us for over thirty years.  Do you think he will now forget about us now?”

Then I began to consider why my brother was called of God to the mission field and I was not.  Perhaps it was because he was able to drown out his fears with faith in a trustworthy God.  While I was fearfully quizzing my brother concerning his next move, he was resting on the promises of a loving God.  There is no need to be fearful, was it not said of the Author of the Universe, the One who cannot lie or deceive, the One who has never broken a promise, “And my God will meet all your needs according to his glorious riches in Christ Jesus” ? (Philippians 4:9)

Photo credit: Fr. Stephen, MSC (Creative Commons)

How Do We Save The Church In America?

Jesus Resurrection Life SC How Do We Save The Church In America?

John the Revelator warned the church at Laodicea, “You say, ‘I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.’ But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked.”  (Rev. 3:17)

While Christians in other parts of the world have been sharpened by much suffering and persecution, many Christians in America have been softened by lives full of comfort and ease.  Many devout Christians in other countries are willing to die for what they believe, but here in America, it’s hard to get people to even live for what they believe.  Too many American churches are characterized by apathy and spiritual laziness.  “If a man is lazy, the rafters sag; if his hands are idle, the house leaks.” – (Ecc. 10:18)

As watchmen on the wall, we must awaken those who are spiritually dead.  John used the word ‘wretched’ in his description of the church at Laodicea.  Is ‘wretched’ a word too strong to describe the church in America?  We are wretched because we have made acceptable what God has declared an abomination.  We are wretched because we have worshiped our own idols, and we have twisted the word of God to suit ourselves.  We are wretched because we have been displeased with whom God says He is, so we’ve created a God whose sovereignty is bound by His own love and who is incapable of demonstrating the wrath of His judgment.

We have become enthralled by our own pleasure, and we are obsessed by our own prosperity.  Many American churches have become shamefully man-centered.  When we ought to solemnly enter the church to worship the great and mighty God in fear and trembling (the One who spoke us into existence and has the power to snuff our lives out like a candle), instead, we enter the church focused on ourselves.  The church has become like a psychic smorgasbord for those who are experiencing difficulty or for those who feel the need for more satisfaction in life.  We want recreation for our kids, we want financial and emotion counseling for ourselves, and we want the services of the church to focus more on man-centered entertainment rather than God-centered worship.

God has said to us, “…I know the plans I have for you…plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”  (Jeremiah 29:11)  But we have no interest in his plans for us.  We arrogantly submit our own agenda to God and expect him to accommodate us.  We have become a foolish and senseless people “who have eyes but do not see and who have ears but do not hear.”  (Jeremiah 5:21)

Death can come to a church in two ways.  It may simply cease to exist, or it may die inwardly.  Many American churches are just empty shells, filled with spiritual zombies-walking dead men.  False teaching has crept into the church and has smothered the truth.  Satan has perfected his deceptive skills.  Heresy comes in many ways.  It is often introduced by a big-name preacher whom the majority will follow like senseless sheep.  We must be awakened to the danger of ministers who are more focused on entertaining us rather than pointing us toward the Lamb that was slain to take away the sin of the world.  Paul gave Timothy a formula for a dying church:  “For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths.”  (2 Tim. 4:3-4)

Many churches have spiritual life strangled from them because they have allowed immorality, materialism, and worldliness to creep in like a slowly growing cancer.  The church is in deep trouble when more of its members are lusting after the flesh and after materialism rather than fostering a deep yearning for fellowship with the true God.

As watchman on the wall, we must awaken a disillusioned church.  “Awake, awake!  Rise up, O Jerusalem, you who have drunk from the hand of the LORD the cup of his wrath, you who have drained to its dregs the goblet that makes men stagger.”  (Isaiah 51:17)

We have been drugged by an enemy who will steal away our souls if we don’t awaken.  We have been intoxicated by our own indifference.  When our pews are full of people who want to attend but don’t want to get involved, we know it has become more about us than about God.  When we only pick up our Bibles on Sunday morning, or when our only call to God is a 911 call, then we have become apathetic about the most valuable thing anyone can experience on this earth;  a personal relationship with God Almighty!

What was God’s reaction to indifference in the church at Laodicea?  He said, because “you are lukewarm and neither cold nor hot, I am going to vomit you from my mouth.” (Rev. 3:16)  It is much less harmful for a church like that to cease to exist than to continue to spread a distorted gospel to a lifeless people.

Our calling as watchmen on the wall is to bring sinful people to salvation through Jesus Christ.  We are to lovingly reach out to the lost.  Our first priority is to “open their eyes, in order to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among those who are sanctified by faith in Me (Christ).”  (Acts 26:18)

As watchmen, we are too often hesitant to confront our culture.  We must do this, not in our own wisdom, but in the power of the word of God.  Watchmen are not glorified reformers of society.  Jesus didn’t come to start a social revolution.  He didn’t try to abolish the slavery that existed in his day.  He didn’t lead a march against Rome in protest of high taxes.  He didn’t campaign for the Democrat or Republican parties.  He never led a civil rights march.  His focus was not on this kingdom.  He came to awaken the sinful, sleeping hearts of men and women.

As watchmen on the wall, we must not lose ourselves in the task of trying to reform a sinful, earthly kingdom.  Many in our society believe that the ultimate act of service to mankind is to plant another tree or save another whale.  This is but another deception.  The ultimate service any man can do for another is to point his darkened soul to the Light that can dispel all darkness.  The greatest service we can do for our fellow man is to love him with the love of Christ and invite him to live his eternity in the Kingdom of God.

Photo credit: Fr. Stephen, MSC (Creative Commons)