The Official Blog of matt-perry.net

Entries categorized as ‘Uncategorized’

Condolences

July 16, 2006 · Leave a Comment

I received an e-mail from Roddie Taylor, pastor of the Mt. Beulah Evangelical Baptist Church at Point Fortin, Trinidad,  at around 6:05 tonight that his father, Giles McNiely, passed away at the age of 80.  Mr. McNiely had just come through prostate surgery in good order, so this was very unexpected.  He was on our prayer guide for both physical healing and for salvation — we pray that salvation did take place through Christ.

For those of you who may not know, our church has partnered with him on a number of projects so this touches us quite deeply.  Roddie’s e-mail is mtbula@hotmail.com .   I know he would truly appreciate any condolences you may offer.

Categories: Uncategorized

Miscellaneous Articles (That Have No Connection At All With One Another)

July 14, 2006 · 1 Comment

Jim Shaddix as pastor or Riverside Baptist Church in Denver outlines the ten commandments for church music. Click here to read.

Pastors Feel Confident in Ministry, But Struggle to Interact With Others (Barna): click here to read.

“Stop Test Driving Your Girlfriend” by Michael Lawrence: takes a look at how single people often date and how self-oriented it is. Is there a theology in place for dating? Click here to read.

And on a ridiculously personal note:

The Louisville Cardinals Football team has signed Bobby Petrino to a 10-year-contract!!  If interested, click here.

Categories: Uncategorized

Prayer for Bluegrass Baptist School in Lexington, KY

July 10, 2006 · 1 Comment

bgbsbuildingsm.gif

I was asked yesterday to keep the Bluegrass Baptist School in prayer. This is a wonderful ministry here in Lexington and I personally am excited about this ministry because my oldest daughter will begin Kindergarten there. Mrs. Bowles is the kindergarten teacher there who has been teaching there for 31 years. She is absolutely tremendous.

God has kept this ministry rolling since 1969. So continue to pray for this incredible institution.

Categories: Uncategorized

I’m a soccer fan for the next month!

June 10, 2006 · Leave a Comment

The World Cup begins.  Soccer is very close to me this time of year because of the death of my nephew, Gray Griffin.  Gray was killed in an auto accident in October of 2002 at the age of 18.  He was the captain of the 16-17 USA World Cup team and could very likely have been on the World Cup team this year. 

I say that in light of the Sports Illustrated article in this past week's magazine about our team.  You will read about how back in 1999 the US best 16 and 17 year old soccer players went to school and trained in Bradenton, Florida.  Gray was a part of that experiment to try and get the USA among the elite.  Landon Donovan, DeMarcus Beasley and others were down there with Gray and now are the main stars of our World Cup team.  I miss you, Gray.  I'll be thinking about you when the USA takes the pitch.

Also, I am a big Trinidad and Tobago fan and the Soca Warriors (their national team) made it to the World Cup for the first time in their history.  When they beat Bahrain on November 16 to qualify for the World Cup, their Prime Minister immediately declared a national holiday!  They are five minutes away from starting their first match against Sweden and its on ABC.  So if you'll excuse me, I'm going to watch the Soca Warriors and hope there is a mammoth upset in the works.   Either way, they are just happy to be there.  If they beat Sweden — look out!

Categories: Uncategorized

Do You Know Him? (Philippians 3:1-11)

June 5, 2006 · Leave a Comment

 

Do You Know Him?

What To Consider Before Going On-Mission

Philippians 3:1-11

Commissioning Service for our WorldChangers 2006 Team

(You may listen to this sermon via RealAudio at http://www.boonescreekchurch.com or by clicking here.) 

 

Introduction

 

This morning, we praise God for the team He has raised from our youth and adults as they go on-mission to Moberly, Missouri.  This makes the seventh year that our youth have worked with either WorldChangers or Kentucky Changers in doing missions work in the name of Christ.  This morning, we also praise God for Eric Masters, Anthony Varble and the staffers at the Boone’s Creek Camp who will minister to middle and high school students.  What a special day this is to see so many young people ready to step out and make a visible difference in our world for the name of Christ.

 

When I first went into the pastorate in 1999 and even in the ministry back in 1992, I remember that white-hot passion I had to make Christ known to whoever would hear.  Yet, as we look at the Apostle Paul, we see throughout his entire ministry he desired to make Christ known — but he also knew that of critical importance for his own life and ministry was to know Christ. 

 

Do you know Him?  Not know about Him — as if you were simply looking at His resume?  I mean, do you know Him?  What does that mean?

 

1.                  To know Christ means that we engage in the worship of God.

 

But whatever gain I had, I counted as loss for the sake of Christ.  Indeed, I could everything as loss for the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.  For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things and count them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ (Philippians 3:7-8). 

 

Paul here says, “All that I had — all that was to my profit is now in the loss column.   And now what was in my loss column is now to my gain.”  All that matters is knowing Christ Jesus — to him, that was of the utmost worth and treasure to him.  He compared  all that used to be in the profit column, all that used to be treasure to Him as ‘rubbish.’ 

 

Rubbish here is pretty strong language.  Rubbish comes from the Greek word that could also mean dung, manure, even excrement.  With that type of waste, it not only describes the substance, but also the content and how you want it out!

 

I have four children:  a five-year-old, a two –year-old and twin eight month old boys.  My wife could tell you better than I that it is nothing for us to use 20 diapers a day between our three youngest.  One thing about it is that you do not want those diapers hanging around — even our handy dandy Diaper Genie won’t help out that way.  You want it out of the house!  It’s of no use to you and it is offensive!  You want it gone.

 

This is the essence of worship, dear friends, is that you treasure Christ above all.  In fact, the word ‘worship’ comes from the Old English woerthscipe with denotes worthiness, respect, reverence.  For Paul, Jesus Christ was of “surpassing worth.”  Just knowing him brought joy to his heart that knew no bounds.  A.W. Tozer put it so well: 

 

“What is worship? Worship is to feel in your heart and express in some appropriate manner a humbling but delightful sense of admiring awe and astonished wonder and overpowering love in the presence of that most ancient Mystery, that Majesty which philosophers call the First Cause, but which we call Our Father Which Are in Heaven.”

 

I believe this is why Paul starts the conclusion of this letter that we as Christians are to “rejoice in the Lord.”  This phrase comes up again in Philippians 4:4 in a two-fold manner, where Paul says, “Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice” (Philippians 4:4).  Since Paul repeats that admonition to rejoice, we must not neglect nor take for granted the object of our joy — which also happens to be the object of our worship!  We rejoice in the Lord.  This phrase is key through out the entire passage — our joy, our treasure, and our worship must center on Jesus Christ our Lord. 

 

  

2.                  To know Christ means that we experience the true righteousness of God.

 

Philip. 3:9

    And be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God that depends on faith—

 

Paul here makes a distinction between false righteousness and true righteousness.  And as we ponder Jesus’ words about how blessed we are when we hunger and thirst for righteousness, we have to ask, what type of righteousness do we hunger after?  Is it a righteousness that we can look at in our own thoughts and activities and words and say, “See, I’m righteous!  Look what at what I did.  Look at what I said!” 

 

Why this admonition?  In the very next verse, Paul unloads on a group known as the Judaizers who kept preaching what I call a Christ-Plus religion.  Religions and cults practice this all across the world and have all throughout history.  In essence, it means that you bring something to the table to contribute to your salvation.  These Judaizers preached that you must trust Christ, but still keep all the Jewish rituals and sacrifices and even hold to the ritual of circumcision.

 

It must be said that the worship in which the Judaizers were engaged caused the Apostle Paul to be enraged.  He told the people to “look out for the dogs, look out for the evildoers, look out for those who mutilate the flesh” (v. 2).  How ironic that Paul, a Jew, called these Judaizers a name that those Jews often reserved for Gentiles.  How noteworthy that he called them “evildoers,” even though they were given the “oracles of God” in the Law (Romans 3:2).  How pathetic that they felt obligated to follow Abraham’s example of the covenant in circumcision, yet since they did not worship by faith but by the flesh they were merely mutilating themselves. 

 

Then he says, “For we are the real circumcision, who worship by the Spirit of God and glory in Christ Jesus and put no confidence in the flesh” (Philippians 3:3).   Paul continued by saying, “You think you have confidence in the flesh, I have more.”  The interesting thing about his resume in verses 5 and 6, most folks would just kill to have just a few of these things — and Paul had it all and they wished they had it.  In fact, take the word WISH and you’ll see what I mean:

 

  • Wielded authority.  Paul’s zeal led him to be a “persecutor of the church,” as someone who was given the authority to bring those belonging to the church of Jesus Christ into prison (Acts 22:5). 
  • Intellect:  to be a Pharisee meant you had to have a brilliant intellect.  You had to memorize the Pentateuch, know all 613 laws and traditions in place. 
  • Status:  The word “Pharisee” comes from the word to mean “separate.”  John MacArthur notes that to reach the level of a Pharisee was to reach the highest level in devout, legalistic Judaism.  They were separate unto the Law —
  • Heritage:  the first three items listed in Paul’s resume had nothing to do with anything he did, but everything to do with what his parents did.  Even before Paul could control his own devotion to the Law, his parents laid the foundation. 

 

Paul says, “I had confidence in the flesh — and even had more of a reason to confide in my flesh than any of you Judaizers.  But now, they are refuse to me!  My treasure that I had in my flesh, it’s trash now.”  Why?  Because that trash inteferes with the treasure of Jesus!

 

Romans 2:28-29, Paul says, “For no one is a Jew who is merely one outwardly, nor is circumcision outward and physical.  But a Jew is one inwardly, and circumcision is a matter of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the letter. His praise is not from man but from God.”  These Judaizers were currently putting their faith in exactly what Paul did in the past — in their flesh – in merely outside rituals and services. 

 

Paul certainly hungered after a righteousness — a righteousness of his own that comes from the Law.  For him, the Law was a ladder by which he climbed to God.  Paul is not saying that the Law is a bad thing… on the contrary, the Law is good because it is God’s law.  Yet, Romans 3:20 says, “For by works of the law no human being will be justified in his sight, since through the law comes knowledge of sin.”   But in Romans 3:21, it says, “But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the Law and the Prophets bear witness to it.”  

 

So here again, Paul shows a righteousness that comes from God apart from the Law.  It comes not from the flesh obeying it, but through faith in the One who kept it on our behalf and who bestows that righteousness to us!  The flesh says, “I can get to God by depending on my works!”  The Spirit of God through Christ says, “I can get to God only through confident faith and total dependence on Jesus who stood as my substituted on that cross for my sin.  2 Cor. 5:21 says that “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.”  

 

You say, I’m not like Paul — I don’t think it’s up to me!  Good!  Yet you must be careful.  We can fall into two categories as Christians.  One category says, “I’m in Christ.  He loves me as I am.  I don’t have to do anything for Him because I’m in the kingdom.”  Sadly, many are like that.  Please examine yourselves

 

Others believe that Jesus will only love them if they go on a missions trip, come to church every Sunday, read their Bible, etc.  They are trying to please God by what they do — not through a relationship.  That righteousness comes through a relationship and through fellowship with the one who lived and died and rose again on our behalf.

 

3.                  To know Christ means that we enjoy fellowship with Christ..

 

“ … that I may know him and the power of his resurrection, and may share his sufferings, becoming like him in his death,  [11] that by any means possible I may attain the resurrection from the dead.”

 

Last Sunday, our church had a wonderful fellowship down at the park.  What a wonderful time that was when about 60 of us broke bread together, listened to the youth lead out in some wonderful worship music — we enjoyed a great time of fellowship.  What makes our fellowship work here at Boone’s Creek?  We enjoy being in each other’s company. 

 

Paul here notes that he wants to know Christ (I hope we’ve gotten that by now!).  Here, he says, “I want to know him.”  Paul wants to so identify with Christ that He wants to experience what Christ experiences — in full! 

 

Paul wanted to fellowship with Him not only in His life but also in Christ’s death — he wanted to be identified with Him in His sufferings.  Through going through the sufferings for Christ’s sake, He could identify with Him fully. In Acts 5:41, as the disciples were questioned and flogged by the Sanhedrin for preaching in the name of Jesus, we see this:  “Then they left the presence of the council, rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer dishonor for the name.”   

 

Part of Paul’s initial calling was to suffer for Christ.  In Acts 9:15-16, we read: “But the Lord said to him, ‘Go, for he is a chosen instrument of mine to carry my name before the Gentiles and kings and the children of Israel.  [16] For I will show him how much he must suffer for the sake of my name.’” 

 

1 Peter 4:13 says, “But rejoice insofar as you share Christ's sufferings, that you may also rejoice and be glad when his glory is revealed.”  Matthew 5:11-12, Jesus says, “Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account.  [12] Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.”  The joyful life, the blessed life in Christ, the calling of Christ to His mission and work only comes through suffering for Christ’s sake. 

 

But He desired to be with Christ in His sufferings so that He would rely only on the sufficiency of God’s grace.  Job said in Job 13:15, “Though he slay me, I will hope in him.”  In 2 Corinthians 12:9-10, Paul says, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness." Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me.  [10] For the sake of Christ, then, I am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities. For when I am weak, then I am strong.”

 

He talks about the power of his resurrection.  You see, Paul invested all of his life in following the Law — in trying to do His own to fulfill God’s commands.  The power of the Law which he thought lead to life, leads to death because the Law brings along sin, whose wages are death (Romans 3:20, 6:23).  Therefore, if the Law leads to death, that cuts off fellowship with the living and holy God who is life!

 

Here’s the issue:  this was all accomplished at the cross.  All you have to do is look at the cross.  The cross goes in two directions:  vertically and horizontally.  Paul here is focusing on the vertical nature of his Christian walk:  knowing intimately and personally God through Christ.  But with that, he desires to not only know God but to make him known in fellowshipping with others. 1 John 1:1-4 says this:

 

That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we looked upon and have touched with our hands, concerning the word of life— [2] the life was made manifest, and we have seen it, and testify to it and proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and was made manifest to us— [3] that which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ.  [4] And we are writing these things so that our joy may be complete.

 

John desired to proclaim all that Christ is and was and will be — why? — so that all who hear may have fellowship with them, and thus have fellowship with God through Christ.  J.I. Packer notes, “The person who is not in fellowship with the Father and the Son is no Christian at all, and so cannot share with Christians the realities of their fellowship.” 

    

Conclusion

In the Antarctic summer of 1908-9, Sir Ernest Shackleton and three companions attempted to travel to the South Pole from their winter quarters. They set off with four ponies to help carry the load. Weeks later, their ponies dead, rations all but exhausted, they turned back toward their base, their goal not accomplished.

Altogether, they trekked 127 days. On the return journey, as Shackleton records in The Heart of the Antarctic, the time was spent talking about food — elaborate feasts, gourmet delights, sumptuous menus. As they staggered along, suffering from dysentery, not knowing whether they would survive, every waking hour was occupied with thoughts of eating. Jesus, who also knew the ravages of food deprivation, said,  "Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for RIGHTEOUSNESS." We can understand Shackleton's obsession with food, which offers a glimpse of the passion Jesus intends for our quest for righteousness. 

Do you have that passion for God's presence?  Do you have that hunger and thirst after God's righteousness?  May God grant us that passion even now. 

     
 

Categories: Devotional · Uncategorized

Are Short-Term Missions Trips Good or Bad? (Hat tip to John Divito)

May 27, 2006 · Leave a Comment

Click here to read a very probing article about our motives for short-term missions (thanks to John Divito of The Reformed Baptist Thinker blog).

Categories: Uncategorized

Treasuring The Word of God

May 27, 2006 · 1 Comment

A missionary in France told of a little French girl who became a believer. Although she had been blind from birth, she knew how to read Braille. Someone gave her the gospel of Mark in Braille, and she loved it so much that she eventually developed calluses on her fingers from reading it so often. Those calluses meant she no longer could read. 

Hoping to make her fingers more sensitive, she peeled the skin from the end of her fingers. But instead her fingers became permanently scarred. Believing she would never read again, she bent down to give the pages of God's Word a farewell kiss. As she did, she soon realized that her lips were more sensitive than her fingers. She then learned how to read God's Word with her lips.

Categories: Uncategorized

Death By Ministry (Mark Driscoll)

May 25, 2006 · Leave a Comment

(I posted this on my blog for pastors and preachers, but wanted to share this with the readership at this blog as well.  Pray for your pastors, y'all!) 

At our recent Reform & Resurge Conference in Seattle, my good friend Pastor Darrin Patrick from The Journey in Saint Louis spoke frankly of the burden that pastoral ministry is. I have pushed myself to the edge and over the edge of burnout throughout my nearly ten years in vocational ministry. Subsequently, I have been doing a great deal of research that I am compiling in hopes of not only improving my own life but also the lives of the leaders at Mars Hill Church and the churches in our Acts 29 Network. As a leader I commonly set the pace of ministry for those under me, which can lead to wholesale burnout of others if I don’t learn this lesson and teach it to others. The following points that I pray are helpful are some brief thoughts from what God has been teaching me as of late. Lastly, the fact that at least twenty-two separate organizations exist in the U.S. solely to deal with pre- and post-pastoral burnout indicate that this is a widespread problem that has only been identified and researched since the 1950s.

To read the rest of this article (and you must), click here.

Categories: Uncategorized

Death By Ministry (Mark Driscoll)

May 25, 2006 · Leave a Comment

At our recent Reform & Resurge Conference in Seattle, my good friend Pastor Darrin Patrick from The Journey in Saint Louis spoke frankly of the burden that pastoral ministry is. I have pushed myself to the edge and over the edge of burnout throughout my nearly ten years in vocational ministry. Subsequently, I have been doing a great deal of research that I am compiling in hopes of not only improving my own life but also the lives of the leaders at Mars Hill Church and the churches in our Acts 29 Network. As a leader I commonly set the pace of ministry for those under me, which can lead to wholesale burnout of others if I don’t learn this lesson and teach it to others. The following points that I pray are helpful are some brief thoughts from what God has been teaching me as of late. Lastly, the fact that at least twenty-two separate organizations exist in the U.S. solely to deal with pre- and post-pastoral burnout indicate that this is a widespread problem that has only been identified and researched since the 1950s.

To read the rest of this article (and you must), click here.

Categories: Uncategorized

Exegetical Escorts? (BP)

May 23, 2006 · Leave a Comment

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (BP)–Preachers must escort their hearers into the presence of God by submitting to God’s inspired Word and proclaiming it to His church, preaching professor Robert Smith said during Southern Baptist Theological Seminary’s Power in the Pulpit Conference.

Smith, of Beeson Divinity School in Birmingham, Ala., said preachers serve as exegetical escorts for their congregations by presenting God’s Word in an understandable way.

“The exegetical escort is an individual who serves in the Lord’s service by taking this Word of God and exegeting it, expounding upon it, dissecting it and saying what it says,” Smith said.

“The exegetical escort is designed to embrace the text of Scripture in order to usher the hearers into the presence of God for the purpose of transformation.”

Smith, a former preaching professor at Southern, was one of three speakers at the annual conference, along with Southern Seminary President R. Albert Mohler Jr. and professor of Christian preaching Hershael York. More than 200 pastors attended the event.

Preaching will always elicit a response, Smith said, noting that the Gospel herald can expect one of two responses.

“God’s Word will not go out and come back void; it will accomplish that for which it was sent,” Smith said. “Sometimes people will respond in rebellion and sometimes in reception. The Word will draw people or it will drive people away.”

Many modern preachers mistakenly value style more than substance, Smith noted. He cited Augustine’s four books on Christian doctrine, “On Christian Teaching,” where the first 75 percent of the material focuses on doctrine, while only the last quarter is devoted to style in presentation.

“What we do is turn it around. [If we wrote the book,] we would deal with style in the first three sections and substance in the last one,” he said. “Substance must be considered primarily and style secondarily.”

Another problem with contemporary preaching is the eclipse of the cross, Smith said.

“We have so much cross-less preaching. Don’t we understand that there is no salvation outside of the cross of Christ?” Smith asked. “It was necessary for Christ first to suffer the cross and then enter into glory. That is what the reformers taught. The theology of the cross [comes] before the theology of glory. Today, we want to wipe out the cross and quickly move to glory.”

Smith also said that many preachers dilute grace in their preaching.

“We start off by preaching salvation by grace and, before we know it, we are preaching sanctification by works,” he said. “Anytime we add anything to grace we are diluting grace. I am justified by grace, sanctified by grace, adopted by grace and I’m going to be glorified by grace. It is grace plus nothing.”

Smith said it is the preacher’s role to be like Philip in Acts 8 guiding the Ethiopian eunuch through Scripture and explaining what he did not understand.

“[Sometimes] the text is closed and the preacher has to open it,” Smith said. “My job is to be an exegete. I am supposed to help people see what they can’t see.”

Mohler, in his message during the mid-March conference, noted there are church buildings on virtually every street corner in America but few expository preachers and the remedy for this shortage is a generation of ministers who will proclaim the changeless truth of the Gospel to a culture that views nothing as changeless.

“We are now in big trouble because as you look across this country, you can find on almost every block a church — that is, a building,” Mohler said. “You can find bricks and stone, and you can find steeples and organs, and you can find pulpits and all the rest.

“But you do not find preaching — at least as the church of the Lord Jesus Christ has understood preaching for nearly 20 centuries — in far too many of these churches. And I think it’s because it’s getting harder [to preach].”

Preaching from James 5:7-8, Mohler urged preachers to have patience as they wait for their ministry to bear fruit in listeners’ lives.

“The one thing we may forget that is indispensable to our preaching is patience,” Mohler said. “And the one thing our people do not even know to expect as a matter of our preaching is patience.”

Often preachers become frustrated because every sermon does not appear to change lives instantly, he said.

Biblical preaching is further complicated by the fact that postmodern Americans find it strange to take instruction for modern life out of an ancient book, Mohler said.

“We show up and say, ‘This ancient book is going to tell us how to order our lives today.’ And that sounds extremely strange to a world that isn’t ready to hear an authoritative word from an ancient source,” he said.

But preachers must teach the Bible week-in and week-out because faithfulness to God’s Word over time will yield eternal results, Mohler noted.

“Be strong,” he said. “Be patient. Strengthen your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is near. How long do we have to be patient? Until the Lord comes. But take heart. The Lord’s coming is near.”

York exhorted conference attendees to preach faithfully even during life’s most difficult times. Drawing on the example of Ezekiel, York said effective ministers often learn to trust God through trials.

“It’s easy to serve the God who will give you your best life now,” he said. “That’s the God we want. That’s the God we create. That’s not the God we serve. How do you serve a God who causes what you have always regarded as the worst-case scenario in your life?

“Dear brothers, I tell you, you’ve got to preach the Word even in the midst of your worst-case scenario.”

During difficult times, the preacher should think about God’s call on his life as motivation to continue proclaiming the Bible, York said.

“Commitment to preach really is a function of your calling,” he said. “If you have a light regard for your calling, if you’re not very certain that God’s really called you, if you feel like you’re just trying this out to see how it works, you will wash out at the first sign of trouble. If you have a light regard for your calling, you’ll have a light regard for your preaching.”

Categories: Uncategorized