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Unprecedented: Pastor Jason Looks back on 2020, forward to the future

2/26/2021

2 Comments

 
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“Unprecedented…”

Who knew that by the beginning of April 2020, this word would be on everyone’s lips. By May the word was overused and by June downright obnoxious. But few words sum up 2020 more appropriately. From a global pandemic to economic uncertainty to shocking injustice, social unrest, and rancorous politics culminating in a contested election and attempted insurrection…UNPRECEDENTED! Few words more appropriately sum up this past year.

But just as the challenges of the past year have been unprecedented, so also have been the opportunities. The shutdowns in March 2020 kept us at home, worshiping and fellowshipping remotely for nearly three months. Palm Sunday, Good Friday, Easter Sunday, Mother’s Day and every service in between, the church building at the corner of Montrose and Melvina sat empty on Sundays at 10:45 AM and 7:30 PM. Truly an unprecedented challenge, but one that also presented unforeseen opportunities.

In 2020 we did not meet less – WE MET MORE!
Daily prayer meetings on Zoom convened – and continue! – each and every weekday at 3:00 PM. Sunday services were broadcast from the parsonage via YouTube, Facebook Live, Instagram TV and Zoom. John played the piano in the living room. Tanya sang and led worship in the dining room. Ric and Che led Sunday school from their homes. Several people ministered music. I preached the sermon, led in communion, and sought by God’s grace to shepherd the flock. One special memory is hosting the Good Friday service from our dining room table. Another is Tanya’s online Easter Egg Scavenger hunt! Another still is the “Song Nights” when people shared their God-given musical talents and testimonies on Zoom. Youth group continued. Tanya led daily devotions for teens. Jason hosted a Bible story time for kids. The Wednesday night Bible study and prayer meetings reached more people via Zoom and Facebook than it ever did when merely meeting in person.

Services were moved online, but none were cancelled
. While we mourned not meeting together in the same proximity and closeness we are used to, our church family did not forsake the assembling of ourselves, nor did we close ourselves off from the outside world. After three months broadcasting from the parsonage, on June 21 (Father’s Day) we moved services back to the church, continuing to broadcast online via YouTube and on the church website as well as Facebook Live and Zoom. Our YouTube subscribers now top 1,500. One Sunday evening service in June was shared dozens of times and viewed by nearly 3,000 people on Facebook. (Our regular pre-pandemic attendance on Sunday evenings was less than 30 – that’s 100 times more people reached!)

This year
we partnered with our local food pantry by volunteering time and donating needed supplies. I am proud of the work St. Cyprian’s Food Pantry has been doing to help families in need throughout the pandemic. They have had to move operations outside – even in this month’s bone chilling cold weather! – and they are reaching hundreds of people each week and hundreds of families each month. I am working hard every Monday and Thursday to assist in the food distribution, and I’m proud of the other volunteers from Montrose who have also stepped up to help in this important ministry to Chicago’s northwest side. Many neighborhood food pantries had to close during the pandemic. St. Cyprian’s is now providing food for many more people than it did previously, and some families visit the pantry weekly (or more!) to ensure children are fed and household needs are met.

Unprecedented challenges create unparalleled opportunities.
I list just a few of the ways we have adapted and excelled this year, and I am excited to continue living the adventure in 2021. You are a part of it. None of it could have happened without you. Your consistent financial contributions to the church are humbling. Your faithfulness and courage are inspiring. I praise God from whom all blessings flow, even as I give thanks to Him upon every remembrance of you!

Just as God raised up Queen Esther “for such a time as this,” so He has raised us up to serve His purpose in our generation
. It is hard to wrap our minds around all the challenges we have weathered this past year, and only God knows what hurdles lie along the course ahead. We have done our best to wear our masks, wash our hands, and watch our distance. Some have rejoined regular services at the church building. Others continue to faithfully participate online or via telephone. Still others we have sadly had little contact with. New friends have joined our fellowship, and we are looking forward to baptisms this coming Easter.

Life at Montrose continues, but things are different
. When will all return to “normal”? What will become the “new normal”? Church attendance across America was already in sharp decline. We must not assume that post-pandemic openings will suddenly usher in a rush of new attenders. That is why Jesus did not tell us to stay put. He told us to go. So we are going to continue doing what the King of King and Lord of Lords authorized and commissioned us to do. We are going to continue making disciples of Jesus Christ. We are going to keep looking up in worship, digging deep in God’s Word, building into the body of Christ, reaching out to the world around us, and sending forth into the harvest.

Jesus said, "The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; therefore pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest." It all begins with prayer. We cannot do this on our own. We must be fully reliant on God to accomplish the daunting task before us. As we love God and the people He created, prayer must always be our first response.


I am excited and nervous about the journey ahead. Isn’t that the definition of adventure? With eyes fixed on Jesus, let’s run the race marked out for us. We were created to run freely, so let’s drop worldly weights, disengage from sinful entanglements, and leave our burdens at the foot of the cross. We do not know what tomorrow holds, but we know Who holds tomorrow. He is good, and He is God, and that’s all we need to know.


Living the Adventure alongside You,​
Jason Platt, Lead Pastor
Montrose Baptist Church
​Chicago, February 2021 
2 Comments

Uncommon Clarity

4/3/2020

1 Comment

 
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Uncertain times demand uncommon clarity.
 
During this time of great turmoil and unprecedented, ever changing circumstances, how wonderful it is to know that some things never change!

1. God is still God, and He is always good.  
Pray. Read His Word. Seek His face.

2. The Word of God is still true, and by it our faith is fed. 
Are you reading and meditating upon the Word as much as you are watching and listening to the news?

3. The fellowship of believers is still strong.
Though separated by distance, we are together in spirit and one in heart. Have you been calling on your brothers and sisters? Have you been checking on your neighbors?

4. The Gospel is still the one thing people need most.
The viral effects of sin have infected the human race since the Fall. Sin breeds separation. It isolates us from God and one another. Jesus died to pay the price of our sin. Jesus rose in triumph to set us free for the penalty of sin. He alone gives us life and delivers us from the fear of death. He ascended to Heaven, sent the Spirit to empower our witness, and is coming again soon! This is GOOD NEWS that the world needs to hear!
 
5. God is still at work, and His work is always good.
Trial and testing can have a refining influence in our lives. Stress and uncertainty can "heat things up," allowing superfluity and impurities to rise to the surface where they can be scooped away in confession and repentance. Purity is our prize. Maturity in Christ is the goal for which we strive.
 
Times like these strip away the peripherals and bring us back to the things that matter most - the things that eternally endure.

"Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes, not on what is seen, but on what is unseen. For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal" (2 Corinthians 4:16-18).
 
What do you think? Do we live forever, or do we live only for now? If you agree with me in Christ that we live forever, then why are so many Christians living only for now?

Let's keep pressing on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus!

May God Bless & Keep You in His Care,
Pastor Jason
1 Comment

Is this The End? (aka, "The Tribulation," "the Last Day," "The Day of the Lord," "The End of Time," ...)

4/1/2020

1 Comment

 
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A lot of people are thinking about this pandemic and current world events in relation to biblical prophecy. Every generation of Christians has been asking the same questions since Pentecost.

Here are a few thought provoking questions and conversation starters. I'm not pushing any particular eschatological scheme, just sharing with you "as a reminder to wholesome thinking...to recall the words spoken in the past by the holy prophets and the command given by our Lord and Savior through your apostles" (2 Peter 3:1-2).

Q: Are we in tribulation?
A: Yes.

See John 16:33, Acts 14:22, Matthew 24:1-14 (esp. 9) (also 1 Thessalonians 3:3 and 2 Timothy 3:12).


Q: Is this the Great Tribulation?
A: No (Not Yet)

See Matthew 24:15-31 (esp. 21), Revelation 6:1-18 (especially 7-8); read Revelation 6-19 (especially 6:8, 8:7-12, 16:3).


Q: Are these the last days?
A: Yes.

See Acts 2:17, 1 Corinthians 10:11, 2 Timothy 3:1, Hebrews 1:2, James 5:3, 1 Peter 1:5 (with Romans 8:18-25), 2 Peter 3:3, Jude 18.


Q: Is this the Last Day?
A: No (Not Yet)

See John 6:35-59 (especially 6:39, 40, 44, 54), 11:24, 12:48, 2 Peter 3:1-18.


Remember:
Biblical prophecy was never intended to satisfy our curiosity of the future but to inspire holy living in the present (2 Peter 3:11-15). Jesus is coming soon (Revelation 3:11, 22:7, 12, 20), and every sunrise brings us one day closer to the Day of the Son's Return. 

May we rightly handle the Word of Truth (2 Timothy 2:15).  
As Jesus prayed for His disciples, so I pray for all of us, "Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth" (John 17:17).

Grace & Peace,
Pastor Jason

1 Comment

A Pastor's 2020 Vision for His Congregation

2/10/2020

2 Comments

 
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Church is not a place you go. It’s a family you belong to, a group you’re a part of, an organism more than an organization.  Yet the church exists in time and space. While it’s more than an address, it’s a place you can call home, nonetheless. It’s both a space you call home and a place you come home to.
 
With 2020 Vision we see Montrose as a place of BELIEVING, BELONGING, & BECOMING. We desire to see lost sons and daughters running into the arms of the Father. We yearn to hear the once-upon-a-time lonely tell of how they found a forever family. Our hearts skip as we feel the palpable relief of the questioner who has searched for truth and meaning and purpose only to be found by Jesus. All heaven rejoices when the lost are found, when the lonely find family, when the longing find purpose.
 
So won’t you continue along with me in this Jesus way? I’m excited for the future of our church family not because I know what tomorrow holds but because I know Who holds tomorrow. Our vision for the coming year is to see the love of Christ FILL our hearts, OVERFLOW into our relationships, and FLOOD the darkness of the world around us. 
 
Our mission remains simple: KNOWING GOD, GROWING IN CHRIST, & GOING WITH THE SPIRIT. We know God through personal devotions and church worship services. We grow in Christ through prayer partnerships and small groups. We go with the Spirit in personal evangelism and organized outreach.
 
Jesus calls us to walk in love. Let’s LIVE OUR VALUES EVERYDAY: Loving God by practicing the priority of prayer, lifting high our praises and looking deeply into God’s Word; Loving people by opening our hearts to the fellowship of believers and opening our hands to the world around us. 
 
We are a unique body of believers. It’s true! Why deny it? Why run from it? Let’s embrace our quirks. Just like every church family, we’re special, and God is doing something special in our midst. By God’s grace our candle still shines in the darkness. His worship is our purpose, and His Word lights each step of our way. What opportunities and challenges will we encounter along the path in 2020? Only God knows, but He’s given us all we need for life and godliness. His grace is our supply, and His Spirit is our guide. 
 
Your Pastor & Brother in Christ, 
​Jason

​February 2, 2020
2 Comments

Where the Longing find purpose

1/31/2020

1 Comment

 
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Luke chapters 15-19 can be thought of as Jesus’ “Good News for Outcasts and Outsiders.”  In these chapters we begin to see the world through the eyes of the Savior, and as we do we begin to see Jesus’ Vision for The Local Church: A “Place” (people, gathering, assembly, family, body) where…
 
1. …the Lost are Found.
2. …the Lonely Find Family.
3. …the Longing Find Purpose.
 
GOT PURPOSE?
 
How often do you contemplate that thought?  You might think of it as destiny or calling or your reason for existence.  Thoughts of purpose lead us to the big and important questions.
         
Is there a purpose?
What is my purpose?
Am I fulfilling my purpose?
 
Unanswered questions of purpose can become an overwhelming longing of the soul, an impossible to tune out yearning of the heart, an ever-whispering buzzing in the ears of our psyche.
 
These are the big questions of life, aren’t they?  It takes a brave soul to contemplate ultimate questions.  It also takes a strong soul, for questions of purpose have driven some to the mental brink and even over the edge into breakdown and worse.
 
The simple fact is, we humans need to know our purpose.  We need to know why we’re on this road of life, where we’re supposed to go, how we’re supposed to get there and how to know when we’ve actually arrived.  At one horrific concentration camp in Greece, Nazi officials devised a demoralizing experiment with meaningless toil and hard labor.  On pain of execution inmates were ordered to dig holes and then fill them in, to build walls and then tear them down.  The labor was not intended for any productive purpose.  The whole sadistic point was to break the prisoners’ morale. 

​
LUKE 18:18-30 - THE RICH YOUNG RULER
 
In Jesus’ encounter with the Rich Young Ruler (Luke 18:18-30; cf. Matthew 19:16-30; Mark 10:17-31) we learn the sad story of a man who had everything except the one thing that matters most.  Running up to Jesus and falling at His feet he asked, “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”  While he had it all – from affluence to influence – this rich young man realized that even the surest investments mean nothing when your number’s up.  His question was honest and earnest, but in the end, Jesus revealed the true heart of his struggle.  Riches and wealth were his true gods.  His hands were full.  He had no room for Jesus.  He might have been invited to every party on earth, but in terms of the Kingdom of God, he was stuck on the outside looking in.
 
When Jesus told him to sell everything, give it to the poor, then come follow Him, the young man went away sad.  Even for heavenly riches, this poor guy couldn’t part with earthly comforts and transient security.  Jesus responded, "How difficult it is for those who have wealth to enter the kingdom of God!  For it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the kingdom of God."  Aren’t you glad what is impossible for man is possible for God?
 
 
WHOM DO YOU TRUST?
 
Be we rich or poor, the story of this sad young man illustrates what is true of each one of us.  We struggle to trust God because we really trust only in ourselves.  Consider these degrees of self-trust and ask yourself which response best describes you:
 
Degrees of Self-Trust:
“I’m not perfect, but I’m a good person.”
“I’m more good than bad.” ("I'll tip the balance in my favor.")
“I’m better than most.”
“I’m not the worst person I know.”
“At least I’m better than [really terrible person like Hitler or Stalin].”
“I’m not good at all. Only God is truly good, I trust wholly in Him.”
 
 
WHERE IS YOUR TREASURE?
 
Whether we possess a lot or a little, we all have thoughts of the future.  How are you investing your wealth?  Where is your treasure?  And what will become of your investment strategy when your number is up? The rich young ruler illustrates how sometimes good things can become ultimate things.  Blessings from God can become burdens keeping us from God.
 
 
IS JESUS REALLY BETTER?
 
The rich young man went away from Jesus spiritually poor and destitute because Jesus was not enough.  He judged the things of this world to be better than the storehouses of heaven that are hidden in Christ and accessible for His co-heirs.  Nothing in this world can compare with Jesus. 
 
Jesus Is…
Better (Hebrews 7:22; 12:24).
Purer (Colossians 2:17; 1 John 3:1-3).
Surer (Hebrews 6:17-20).
 
 
ONE THING
 
The rich young ruler lacked the one thing that mattered most.  His “one thing” (worldly wealth) kept him from the best thing (heavenly treasure).  His investment strategy was stupid.  Like the rich fool of Luke 12:13-21, the rich young ruler apparently forgot that he was going to die.  He was asking the right question, but he wasn’t open to the answer.
 
What’s Your “One Thing”? Have you left everything to follow Jesus?  What’s holding you back? 
 
What do you value more than Jesus?  What’s the one thing you would never give up for Him?  You say, “Jesus, you can have it all, but you can’t have this.” “You can’t take this.”  “Hands off, Jesus!”  What one thing do you lack?  You may call yourself a Christian, but who's really sitting upon the throne of your heart?
 
 
TRUE TREASURE
 
Check out Scriptures like Matthew 6:19-21 and 2 Corinthians 4:18 and 5:7.  Don’t be like our Rich Young Ruler.  Don’t go away from Jesus sad. 

Make Jesus your treasure, and you’ll have eternal treasure in heaven.  Give Jesus your heart, and your heart will forever be with Him.  For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.

1 Comment

Island of Misfits: Where The Lonely Find Family

1/24/2020

2 Comments

 
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Maybe you're like me and you sometimes feel like you just don't fit in. Like in the 1964 holiday classic "Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer," perhaps you can relate to Rudolph with his red nose or the little North Pole elf who would rather fix teeth than tinker with toys.  Maybe you feel like you’re living with King Moonracer (the winged lion) on the Island of Misfit Toys, just wishing you could fit in somewhere.  You remember those misfit toys, right?  .

• A Charlie-in-the-Box.
• A spotted elephant.
• A train with square wheels on his caboose.
• A water pistol that squirts jelly.
• A bird that swims.
• A cowboy who rides an ostrich.

The fact of the matter is, there are times when we all feel rather like one of those poor toys, like we just don’t fit it.  Everyone else gets an invitation except for us.  We feel like we’re always on the outside looking in.  We wonder if we’ll ever find a place where we fit in.

I'm thankful that in this lonely world of misfits, God’s Word proclaims a wonderful truth.  There is a place where misfits fit in.  It’s not an island of toys ruled by a winged lion. It’s a body of believers joined together and governed by King Jesus Himself.

In Luke chapters 15-19 King Jesus proclaims good news for outsiders.  In this "Gospel for Outcasts and Misfits" we begin to see the world through the eyes of the Savior, and as we do we begin to see Jesus’ vision for the local church.  He wants His church to be a place, a people, where the lost are found, where the lonely find family, and where the longing find purpose.

You may feel like a lost toy on a lonely island of misfits, but King Jesus invites you to humbly accept His invitation to a place where misfits fit in, a place where the lost are found and the lonely find a family.  Of course, it's not really a place or a space so much as a family gathering to worship the Father through faith in the Son by the power of the Holy Spirit.  In this Kingdom King Jesus Himself welcomes the diseased and makes them well (Luke 17:11-19); He welcomes the disabled and makes them whole (Luke 18:35-43); He welcomes the despised and makes them worthy (Luke 19:1-10; 18:9-14); He welcomes the distractions and makes them winsome examples of those who possess the kind of faith that gains entrance into and possession of the very Kingdom of God itself (Luke 18:15-17).

So what will do with the invitation of Jesus? Will you open the door when he knocks?  Will you invite others to come in?  Will you remove the obstacles in their way? Will you open the door and let them in? Will you make them feel welcome? Will you include them? 

You may feel like a lost toy on a lonely island of misfits, but King Jesus invites you to humbly accept His invitation to a place where misfits fit in, a place where the lost are found and the lonely find a family.  And once you’ve found this special place, King Jesus wants you to throw wide the door and invite everyone in!

If you're praying for a lost friend or loved one to be found, or if you're actively inviting a lonely soul to the family of God, please let me know so I can join you in prayer.  Jesus said, "No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him."  Salvation is entirely the work of God, which means prayer must always be our very first priority.

Blessings of Grace & Peace,
Jason Platt
[email protected] 
2 Comments

God's Severe Mercy

3/28/2018

3 Comments

 
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His MERCY is SEVERE.
​But make no mistake:
He STRIKES that He might HEAL.

I never cease to be amazed by the Word of God! This morning I was reading in Isaiah and suddenly a portion from Chapter 19 jumped off the page in a way that I had never before noticed.

Behold the SEVERE MERCY of our God:

"And the LORD will strike Egypt, striking and healing, and they will return to the LORD, and he will listen to their pleas for mercy and heal them" (Isaiah 19:22).

He STRIKES that He might HEAL.

Egypt and Assyria - ancient enemies themselves and the oppressors of Israel from Exodus to Exile - will worship the Lord together (vs. 23), offering sacrifices and offerings and keeping their vows to the Lord (vs. 21). "In that day Israel will be the third with Egypt and Assyria, a blessing in the midst of the earth, whom the LORD of hosts has blessed, saying, "Blessed be Egypt my people, and Assyria the work of my hands, and Israel my inheritance" (vs. 24-25).

In Isaiah 19 the Lord raises up the oppressor. Why? So that Egypt will cry out to Him, so that He will send them a Saviour, Defender, and Deliverer (vs. 20).

When will this take place? "IN THAT DAY" (6 times in Isaiah 19:16-25) - the fulfillment of these prophecies is UNDATED yet INEVITABLE. We who are in Christ experience it in part now within the Kingdom of God. We will experience it fully when our prayers are answered and His Kingdom fully comes. On that Day we will see "a great multitude that no one can number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, with palm branches in their hands, crying out with a loud voice, 'Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb!'" (Revelation 7:9-10).

God's mercy is severe in the same sense that a surgeon's knife must be sharp.  His severe mercy confronts us with our sin, leading us to repentance and worship at the foot of the cross, the very altar where Jesus, the final sacrifice for sin, was stricken for our salvation.

"But what God foretold by the mouth of all the prophets, that his Christ would suffer, he thus fulfilled. Repent therefore, and turn again, that your sins may be blotted out, that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord, and that he may send the Christ appointed for you, Jesus, whom heaven must receive until the time for restoring all the things about which God spoke by the mouth of his holy prophets long ago" (Acts 3:18-21).

His MERCY is SEVERE. But make no mistake: He STRIKES that He might HEAL.
3 Comments

Pity Party Cancellation

10/27/2017

1 Comment

 
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Today I was invited by Self to a party - a pity party thrown in celebration of a pair of perceived injustices. I unwittingly accepted.

​Before I knew it, I found myself seated at the Table of Trifling, Pride on my right and Vanity on my left. Both went on and on about "no good deed going unpunished" and "no one really understands what it's like." We reveled in our hurt and toasted to our pain.

Then I felt a gentle hand on my shoulder, a whisper in my ear. To the chagrin of Pride and Vanity, Self was led by the Spirit to a side room, where a Bible lay open to Psalm 110, another to 1 Peter 2:21-25. There I read of Jesus Messiah: Conquering King, Presiding Priest, Suffering Savior, Shepherd of Souls.

"He committed no sin, neither was deceit found in his mouth. When he was reviled, he did not revile in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten, but continued entrusting himself to him who judges justly. He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we might die to sin and live to righteousness. By his wounds you have been healed" (1 Peter 2:22-24).

Pity Party Cancelled.

Let Pride and Vanity revel in their misery.

Christ has set me free.
1 Comment

Happy "Spiritual" Birthday!

2/9/2017

8 Comments

 
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I answered the phone and was not surprised to hear what for some might sound surprising:

"HAPPY SPIRITUAL BIRTHDAY!"  

It was February 7, and the voice on the other end of the line was that of mom.  She was calling to rejoice with me in the memory of a day early in my childhood, the day I knelt in prayer upon the green carpet beside the gold colored couch in our little living room.  Thanking Jesus for dying on the cross for my sin, I asked Him to come into my heart and be my Savior.  We celebrated afterward with heart-shaped Valentine's Day cookies!  

Every year on February 7, I remember the day that God drew me near, revealed my need for salvation, and opened my heart to receive Jesus as my Savior. Every day is a new experience of His love, and every day I grow in my love for the One who first loved me.

Following Jesus is a journey of joy. There are costs to be counted, but they are nothing compared to what is and is yet to be. So on February 7 (and every day), I smile at yesterday, rejoice in today, and laugh at tomorrow. For Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever!


So what about you?  Jesus said, "You must be born again" (John 3:7).  If you're reading this, you've experienced natural birth, but what about spiritual rebirth?  Do you know what it means to be born of the Spirit?  

"But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God,  who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God."
- John 1:12

Happy Birthday to you!
Some people have two.
Born again means salvation.
How many have you?


PRAYER

Lord Jesus, thank you for dying on the cross for my sin.  I believe that you conquered death and rose from the grave.  Please forgive my sin.  Come into my life and lead me.  In Your Name I pray, Amen. 
8 Comments

Surface Waters & Deep Currents

9/12/2016

1 Comment

 
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The play of the wind upon the surface of the water cannot alter the plan of the Creator.

"There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God, the holy habitation of the Most High.   God is in the midst of her; she shall not be moved; God will help her when morning dawns.  The nations rage, the kingdoms totter; he utters his voice, the earth melts.  The LORD of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress. Selah" - Psalm 46:4-7 
 

UNPLUGGING TO RESET


Sometimes you’ve just got to get away.

 
Sometimes you’ve just got to leave behind the sights and sounds of city life and get away.  You’ve got to trade congested streets for lonely hiking trails, beeping horns for honking geese, nighttime sirens and train whistles for chirping crickets and croaking frogs.  You’ve got to trade the smog and pollution of the concrete jungle and breathe in deep the crisp, cool air of the Northern woods.
 
Sometimes you’ve just got to get away…not by yourself, but with your Creator God. 
 
This summer my daughter Karli and I had the opportunity to do just that.  Along with two other dads and daughters, we departed early Sunday morning to begin the 450 mile trek to Willow Creek’s Camp Paradise in Michigan’s beautiful and wild Upper Peninsula.
 
Our time together created memories we will never, ever forget.  Getting away carved out room for us to grow – closer together as dads and daughters and closer to God as our Heavenly Father.  I will always cherish the memories of that wonderful time on the beautiful shores of the Tahquamenon River.
 
Sometimes you’ve just got to get away.
 
At regular intervals in the pilgrimage of life, we all need to reset, recharge, refocus, and recalibrate.  In order to do so, we must discipline ourselves to regularly power down, unplug, step back, and sit at Jesus’s feet, choosing what is better and knowing that it will never be taken away from us (see Luke 10:38-42).
 
When we get away and spend time with God, we…
 
…Power down to reset.
 
…Unplug to recharge.
 
…Step back to refocus.
 
…Sit at Jesus’s feet to recalibrate.

 
A BETTER PERSPECTIVE

Let’s step away for a moment right now.  Come sit in my chair next to the whispering white pine on the shores of the Tahquamenon.  Listen for the still, small voice of the Holy Spirit as He speaks through His Word.  “You never know how God might whisper when you carve out space to step away.”[1]  God indeed whispered to my soul as I sat in natural solitude, meditating upon the slow flow of the Tahquamenon River and the play of the wind upon its surface.  

Proverbs 21:1 reminds us that "the king's heart is a stream of water in the hand of the LORD; he turns it wherever he will."  The stream of water described in this verse is “water flowing through a manmade channel or irrigation ditch, which a skillful farmer can turn to flow wherever he wishes.”[2]  The idea is that the Lord God is a much higher judge than the king, whom He controls.  In the end, God always gets the final word, and His word is just and righteous.
 
Even when the world seems upside down and inside out, God is sovereign.  God is in control. 

Even when world leaders, presidential candidates, Supreme Court justices, political pundits, and local politicians seem to be guided by the evil trifecta of Satan, sin, and self, God’s purpose and plan remain ever sure.  Civil engineers may have figured out how to reverse the flow of the Chicago River, but God’s course cannot be thwarted.  The flow of His Story can never be reversed.  Evil may seem strong, but it will not win.  For "the LORD has made everything for its purpose, even the wicked for the day of trouble" (Proverbs 16:4).  From beginning to end, God’s purpose will not fail.  God’s plan will not falter.
 
The play of the wind upon the surface of the water cannot alter the plan of the Creator.
 
Allow me to illustrate.  Each day at Camp Paradise begins with breakfast at 8:30 AM.  Prior to breakfast, Dads and Daughters enjoy quite time with God and with each other.  The waterfront area opens at 7:00 AM for Dads and Daughters to canoe, kayak, or ride water bikes on the Tahquamenon River.  On our first full day of camp, Karli and I chose to ride a tandem water bike together.  Now, being very practical and having a little experience, I checked with the staff member as to which way the current flows in the river, the idea being that you always want to start paddling (or in our case peddling!) against the current, so that when arms and legs are tired on the return trip, the current will help you home.
 
Glancing out at the water from the perspective of the camp, the river seemed to be flowing toward the south.  A stiff breeze was blowing, and the water appeared to be flowing quickly in a southward direction.  Good thing I checked in with an experienced river guide, because I was wrong.  The wind was blowing the surface waters of the river in a southward direction, but the deep and powerful current of the river flows ever northward, just as its Creator planned from the very beginning.
 
Going against the visual evidence of the surface waters, we trusted the experienced river guide and started out toward the South.  Sure enough, when it came time to turn around and head home, the deep currents of the river helped push us in the right direction, even against a stiff wind!  Both Karli and I looked at each other and commented how much easier it was to paddle (or in our case peddle!) with the current rather than against it.  Even in the face of a stiff wind, even though the surface waters were flowing quickly South, the deep currents were leading ever North.  I’m glad we checked with an experienced river guide before setting out.  It made the trip home much easier and much more enjoyable.
 
The next day, I found myself sitting in my special chair next to the whispering white pine on the shores of the Tahquamenon.  I was studying my Bible, listening for the still, small voice of the Holy Spirit as he speaks through His Word.  Suddenly, in the quietness of that special place, the enormous white pine caught the wind, as it always did, about five seconds before the smaller trees around it.  As the whispering wind blew, I glanced up from my Bible to gaze upon the glistening river below.
 
It was then that God brought the analogy home to my heart:  Surface Waters & Deep Currents…
The play of the wind upon the surface of the water cannot alter the plan of the Creator.
 
From the vantage point of the camp, the wind was blowing the surface water south, against the northerly course designed by the Creator.  But the deep currents were ultimately driving the river north, exactly as God had designed.
 
Are you starting to get the idea?  Presidents and politicians and pundits may seem to be taking us further and further upstream from God’s purposes and plans, but they are nothing more than wind playing upon the surface of the water.  From beginning to end, History is moving in God’s direction.  No matter how powerful, no country, no terrorist organization, no political movement, not even Satan himself can alter the deep currents of God’s eternal purpose and plan.
 
Truth be told, I’m growing more and more tired of the hopeless hand-wringing that occupies the time of so many professing Christians.  It seems as if some truly believe God has lost control of the present situation in our world today.  Of course, it is right to be concerned about present circumstances.  It is right to mourn the moral decline of our country.  It is right to decry injustice and cry out for God to intervene.  But let us never forget: our hope is secure.  Let the wind blow where it will, our God is in control.
 
"There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God, the holy habitation of the Most High.   God is in the midst of her; she shall not be moved; God will help her when morning dawns.  The nations rage, the kingdoms totter; he utters his voice, the earth melts.  The LORD of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress. Selah" (Psalm 46:4-7).  "Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful" (Hebrews 10:23).
 

TAKING IT HOME
 

Think about your personal life and circumstances for a moment.
 
How is the wind playing upon the surface of the waters in your own life?
 
          a)      Home Life: Marriage, Kids, Finances
 
          b)      Work Life: Security, Boss, Conflict
 
          c)       Health: Aging, Diagnosis, Insurance, Medical Bills
 
          d)      World: Violence, Terrorism, Persecution
 
How can you learn to grow in trusting God and the deep currents of His abiding purpose
and eternal plan?  Have you fallen victim to the rampant spirit of fear that so grips people
today?  Have you fallen prey to hopeless hand-wringing in the face of all that’s going wrong with
the world?  

"God gave us a spirit not of fear but of power and love and self-control" (2 Timothy 1:7).  "Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding.  In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths" (Proverbs 3:5-6).
 
Remember, no matter how the surface winds blow, God’s purpose for History and His plan for you remain unaltered, unhindered, and unchanged.  The play of the wind upon the surface of the water cannot alter the purpose and plan of the Creator.  This is true of our personal lives and this is true of the broader course of history.  So let’s stop wringing hands in hopeless desperation and start folding hands in hope-filled prayer. 

No one and nothing can alter the purpose and plan of the Creator.
 
Psalm 46:1-11  God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.  2 Therefore we will not fear though the earth gives way, though the mountains be moved into the heart of the sea,  3 though its waters roar and foam, though the mountains tremble at its swelling. Selah  4 There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God, the holy habitation of the Most High.  5 God is in the midst of her; she shall not be moved; God will help her when morning dawns.  6 The nations rage, the kingdoms totter; he utters his voice, the earth melts.  7 The LORD of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress. Selah  8 Come, behold the works of the LORD, how he has brought desolations on the earth.  9 He makes wars cease to the end of the earth; he breaks the bow and shatters the spear; he burns the chariots with fire.  10 "Be still, and know that I am God. I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth!"  11 The LORD of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress. Selah

Romans 8:28-31   28 And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose.  29 For those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, in order that he might be the firstborn among many brothers.  30 And those whom he predestined he also called, and those whom he called he also justified, and those whom he justified he also glorified.  31 What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us?


[1] Camp Paradise 2016 Guidebook

[2] ESV Study Bible
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    Pastor Jason

     The Bible is God's timeless truth for His people today.Hi, my name is Jason Platt, and I am privileged to serve as pastor of Montrose Baptist Church in Chicago, IL.  

    I believe all Scripture is inspired by God and is profitable for teaching, rebuking, correcting, and training in righteousness.

    As we read and study Scripture, we encounter the eternal God.  This eternal God has set eternity in our hearts, and He calls us to live with an eternal perspective.  

    "So we fix our eyes, not on what is seen, but on what is unseen.  For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal" (2 Corinthians 4:18).     

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