February 24th, 2011 by The_Other_Alice

My Mom and Dad went out to the Finger Lakes region recently, and on their trip briefly visited Palmyra, where Joseph Smith started his “movement.” Mom said it’s really creepy and spooky up there. :| Apparently, there’s a gold statue of the Moroni character who “visited” Joseph Smith. Is that what happened to the gold tablets given to Smith? Hmm… Anyway, this all reminded me of some Way of the Master material I’ve seen on Mormonism and how to understand and speak to these people. It’s certainly interesting; here it is for your viewing!

Here’s their On the Box episode in which they discuss Mormonism, as well.

February 2nd, 2011 by The_Other_Alice

For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments. And His commandments are not burdensome. (1 John 5:3)

1 BLESSED are the undefiled in the way, Who walk in the law of the LORD!
2 Blessed are those who keep His testimonies, Who seek Him with the whole heart!
3 They also do no iniquity; They walk in His ways.

14 I have rejoiced in the way of Your testimonies, As much as in all riches.
15 I will meditate on Your precepts, And contemplate Your ways.
16 I will delight myself in Your statutes; I will not forget Your word.

45 And I will walk at liberty, For I seek Your precepts.

From Psalm 119

Praise the LORD!

Blessed is the man who fears the LORD,
Who delights greatly in His commandments.

2 His descendants will be mighty on earth;
The generation of the upright will be blessed.
3 Wealth and riches will be in his house,
And his righteousness endures forever.
4 Unto the upright there arises light in the darkness;
He is gracious, and full of compassion, and righteous.
5 A good man deals graciously and lends;
He will guide his affairs with discretion.
6 Surely he will never be shaken;
The righteous will be in everlasting remembrance.
7 He will not be afraid of evil tidings;
His heart is steadfast, trusting in the LORD.
8 His heart is established;
He will not be afraid,
Until he sees his desire upon his enemies.

9 He has dispersed abroad,
He has given to the poor;
His righteousness endures forever;
His horn will be exalted with honor.
10 The wicked will see it and be grieved;
He will gnash his teeth and melt away;
The desire of the wicked shall perish.

Psalm 112

Blessed are those who do His commandments, that they may have the right to the tree of life, and may enter through the gates into the city. (Revelation 22:14)

Some worldly folks will combat the idea of following God with, basically, the plain truth of the matter: they don’t want to live under His rules. They claim that all the “thou shall not’s” are too restricting; they want to live in “freedom,” “do it my way.” These are the kind of people who will argue that “morality is subjective to society,” “there is no definite, universal, culturally transcending truth.”

However, what lies deep beneath is not necessarily an intellectual barrier, but rather the squirming sensation: “Ew! I don’t want to live under a bunch of rules and stuff and have to follow some control freak and shake people’s hands all the time and sit in stiff pews every week.”

One thing these people do not understand is what God really wants from us. They have to realize who God is, and how they MUST approach Him, because they inevitably will, and will have to give account of all their deeds to Him.

But God is not asking us to fit into a mold and go through loopholes, because none of us have! God offers to cleanse our record and give us His Spirit so we can do His will! And what is His will? To know Him! How do we know that we know Him? If we keep His commandments.

People, God’s commandments are not burdensome! The commandments of the Lord are good for us; He does all things for our sakes! They are not restricting; it is NOT liberating to chase after whatever slow, painful death this world can offer. It is NOT liberating to put off trusting in Jesus in favor of living a religious, self-righteous life– thinking that paying your penance, confessing to the priest, or spending your time in a soup kitchen is what gets you points in heaven. Folks, that is not God’s destiny for us!

Notice the Scriptures above; we walk in liberty because we keep God’s precepts! But it is only possible because we got this.

Closing thought:

“of whom the world was not worthy…” (Hebrews 11)

February 2nd, 2011 by The_Other_Alice

I just finished reading “One Heartbeat Away” by Mark Cahill. It is incredible! It’s the kind of book you can give to anybody who is interested in their eternity. And if they’re not, they can’t be for long if they read the book!
I’ve heard that Muslims, Catholics, atheists, etc. have been born again after reading the book, and after reading it, I am wowed! Mark covers so many topics so straightforwardly, and yet in so few pages! I find it really great that he focuses most of all on the gospel. The arguments of man have their place, but the Gospel is more important, and it is the LAW of God that converts the soul. But Mark doesn’t leave the reader after the Gospel presentation; he goes on to give new believers an intro into their Christian life.

This is a book you will definitely want to pass on! Mark’s website, full of other resources, is here.

I’d also like to share a great video describing how to combat views like relativism, from Living Waters.

While we’re at it, here’s an allegorical video on “clocking out.”

Be strong!

January 4th, 2011 by The_Other_Alice

I haven’t been very wordsy, lately, and it seems it’s the wrong time to be that way! 2010 has been one of the fullest years of my life, and coming out of a tough season in 2009 made it even more interesting.

I’m looking forward to what God has in store for 2011. And I don’t say that methodically or religiously. The earth and everything in it belongs to the Lord. We knew from the start that 2010 was going to be associated with “newness.” Has anyone ever told you that newness often comes out of brokenness? For me, this past year has been about having everything, including myself, fall apart, and trusting that God would make it new. I have learned to trust the Lord that my suffering is not His rejection; I am His child– but not because I go by the title “Christian” or have a Christian family, church, and friends. Rather, it’s because in a time and place I surrendered to Jesus and was regenerated by the Holy Spirit, and have been following Him since. I entered the narrow gate and walk the narrow way. For real, blessed are those who enter by the narrow gate and walk the narrow path!

I also discovered that even though this new birth has brought me incredible freedom and vitality because of communication with the Father, I still have burdens and hurts. And I’m still an incredibly weird weirdo! But not just any ordinary weirdo! … Say, that sounds like an autobiography title! “Not Just Any Weirdo!” Yah!! Funny how I use exclamation points even though I physically lack any energy at all…

I think that the biggest lesson I have learned this year, is actually this: God loves me. He really does! Isn’t that so incredible? Let’s add some perspective to that: God is good. That’s a true statement, a commonly stated statement in Christian circles (I hope!) Now. When we say God is good, we do not take God and fit Him into our perception of good; rather it is observing the character of God, who existed before time began, and defining that as good. Whatever He is, that’s good. When we say God is good, we do not take God and fit Him into our perception of good; rather it is observing the character of God, who existed before time began, and defining that as good. Whatever He is, that’s good. Reason: God, unlimited by time because He is outside of time. Outside of time because He has no beginning and no end. Surely this is boggling to the mind, because our minds are created, with a definite beginning and end, limited by time. God, not defined by good but the definer of good, exactly because He has always existed, thus He defines everything else– His nature is truth. Not His nature is defined by truth, but truth is defined by His nature– His pre-existent, never-ending nature.

So, how would our nature be, compared to His? Not only limited by time, falling short of His knowledge and ability, but also falling short of His purity– because of the choices we have made. Yet somehow, because I gave up all I took pride in regarding goodness and worthiness, and chose to trust that the ransom offered by God’s holy Son would be sufficient for me before the throne of eternity, and that in life He would guide me, He loves me! How cool is that? But this year it has meant even more to me, for many reasons. God does not look for the things human beings look for in me. And because I fall apart (the kind of falling apart from constant pressure–not sin), people can think I’m crazy, and even more so because I just have that gift in the first place. But God wants me to know that what people think does not represent what He thinks. I am the righteousness of God in Christ Jesus, I am clean, I am free, no matter my circumstance or my appearance.

And His grace is sufficient for me. I think that now I have a deeper understanding of what that means. I will be weak and fall apart because of the constant pressure (I’m not talking about giving into temptation; I’m talking about falling down under an avalanche of bricks- the burdens developed by physical and spiritual labor– the weariness that develops after sacrificing ourselves for the sake of others for a long time), but I mustn’t be discouraged, because it’s not my performance that gets me “good” in heaven– it’s the fact that I’m under Jesus’ sacrifice, and that I chose to be there. That’s His grace, and I have to make the choice every day that it is enough for me, on earth just as it is in heaven. I choose to love Him, and I love Him so much, because He is holy and He’s done so much for me. I choose every day to love Him, and I have to choose to believe every day that He loves even a wretch like me– even a weirdo like me!

So in blogging, this year has been pretty spontaneous and random! Ha! I sound so smart when I repeat myself… I can tell that I’ve been relying on funny videos for a part of therapy– laughter is good for the heart!
I’ve tried to keep up with a few memes, until I decided just to do them when I can! They include the Word for Wednesday, Inspiring Story, and Something Beautiful, great memes but I don’t always make it! Unfortunately, Mondays and Wednesdays don’t seem to be the best blogging days for me… but I try, and won’t stress out! Also of note is that I won my first ever contest this year!

New Year’s resolutions? Vacuuming! Check! Complete! Haha! To celebrate New Year’s Day, I skipped about town (literally; did you know it’s more efficient than jogging?), had my first hot white chocolate, and a highlight donut! Haha! That was… two days ago. This post is late in the making :S

But seriously, New Year’s resolutions have seemed hokey to me; everybody wants to lose 10 pounds. The way I see it, all these resolutions will make us hate the year even more because we’ll feel that we haven’t lived up to the standards we set for ourselves. But I believe that this year I’m going to strive to base my actions on what God thinks, not on what man thinks. Of course, this is always the goal, but this year I think I’m going to consider it more consciously, while I wait on whatever He has in store. In that way, I want my life to become more defined as worshiping Him.

As far as the blog goes, I figured I’d find out what the top 10 most popular posts of the year were:

1.) Something Beautiful: A Good Nativity Song. Wow, that made it!

2.) Review: Hillsong Live: Faith+Hope+Love. How cool!

3.) LIFE magazine article on Operation Auca. Now that makes me happy that folks were able to find that resource through my blog!

4.) How to make your own CD cases. My first… okay, ONLY in-depth instructional post.

5.) Book Review: The Heavenly Man by Brother Yun and Paul Hattaway

6.) Let’s See How This Goes… Ha! My “facebook” music tag, thanks to Jay. That game was so fun!

7.) Great Mission Aviation News! The Kodiak airplane, designed for best efficiency for the mission field, reached Kalimantan, Indonesia! How cool!

8.) Word for Wednesday: Ministry

9.) Keep Your Recycling to Yourself. A humorous analogy I found.

10.) Everyone in the Church Must Read! A great clip from a Ray Comfort article on Christianity.

My personal top 10 favorites (aside from the above):

1.) Salvation: What Is It?

2.) Spring Photos. Posted in the winter…

3.) The Art of Songwriting

4.) It’s Been One Year

5.) WFW: One Year

6.) Word for Wednesday: The Beginning and The End. Sums up my year.

7.) Something Beautiful: The Influence of a Christian Mailman

8.) Inspiring Story: Compassion International

9.) The Least of These

10.) Good Friday: Up That Hill

And we gotta have a bonus!
When Did I Become an Alchemist?

Still haven’t joined a blogroll, still not many followers. Oh well. I have the gift of not having popularity except the kind that may be associated with a sore thumb or the buck-toothed elementary kid.

And now after all that writing and all that linking… I’m so done writing. How was your year?

December 21st, 2010 by The_Other_Alice

Since the beginning, those within the church have discussed and hashed out the roles of works and faith in justification and salvation. One side asserts that works are not involved in our salvation, while another asserts that works keep us saved, and another claims we are saved by faith but thereafter we are to work. Oddly enough, each side claims to base its beliefs on Scripture. Yet, surely, just as there is one God, and one way to Him, there must be one answer to the question: just how are we justified in God’s sight, and how can we truly know we are “Christians?” This answer can most certainly be ascertained, by a thorough look at God’s word as a whole, particularly what He has revealed in the New Testament. If this work is inspired of God, it will say the same thing all the way through, regardless of the different human authors.

To begin this topic of justification, there is one place we must begin: our sin. Truly, it is undeniable that all have sinned, and thus fallen short of the glory man once had with his Maker

“for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23).

Because we have broken His Holy standard, no good deeds we do could make up for this, for we are convicted as lawbreakers, worthy of condemnation.

“For whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet stumble in one point, he is guilty of all.” (James 2:10).

Every human being falls into this helpless state, very literally separated from our God. Yet here is where the mercy and lovingkindness of God comes in: He sent His Son down in the form of a man to live a perfect life, never faltering into sin, ultimately to serve as the innocent sacrifice for all the sins of men. He was the ransom– the fine paid for what we owed. When Jesus died and descended to the lower parts of the earth, justice was done and our offenses were paid for. But this was only the first step; Jesus was resurrected just as it had been prophesied, and when He rose, He granted us justification. Now by faith, if we decide to throw ourselves on His grace and receive justification based on what Jesus did, not on any good thing we’ve done, we are saved. This is our salvation.

After Jesus ascended, He sent the Holy Spirit down to live in us, so that we can live clean, free from sin, just like Jesus did. You see, it was our sin that separated us from God in the first place, so it’s not good enough for us just to have a free ticket to heaven, that is, to “accept” Jesus and forget how we live. Jesus’ death gave us a new start in life– our rebirth is the time of surrender, and from then on we must accept the Holy Spirit and live in His power over sin. This is our sanctification.

“For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast. For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them.” (Ephesians 2:8-10)

(see also Romans 8).

Now the Scripture also makes it clear that if we sin, that does not instantly rob us of our salvation, because we were not saved by our works in the first place! Rather, when we realize something wrong in our lives, we repent before God, and He forgives us and helps us to live as He wills.

“If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” (1 John 1:9)

Again, this does not mean that we may sin willfully, because though our works didn’t save us, now that we are made clean, we are to live clean. If a believer rebels against God by continually practicing the things that He hates, he is no longer justified.

“Beware, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God; but exhort one another daily, while it is called “Today,” lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin. For we have become partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast to the end…” (Hebrews 3:12-14)

“For if we sin willfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful expectation of judgment, and fiery indignation which will devour the adversaries. Anyone who has rejected Moses’ law dies without mercy on the testimony of two or three witnesses. Of how much worse punishment, do you suppose, will he be thought worthy who has trampled the Son of God underfoot, counted the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified a common thing, and insulted the Spirit of grace?” (Hebrews 10:26-29)

Philippians 2:12-13 tell us, “…work out your salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure.” Thus we see that our faith, which led to salvation, is evident by what we do, and we must be careful to keep in step with the Spirit who dwells in us, so we don’t fall back to destruction. Throughout the whole New Testament it is clear that we are saved by faith in Jesus Christ, and that we are sanctified by the Holy Spirit living in us.

Now I also know that some have asserted that two books of the Bible, James and Romans, speak of justification in two different senses– that Romans tells of justification before God and James tells of justification before man. Yet truly this is absurd, for starters, because what good is justification before man? Was our problem that we were not justified in man’s sight?

The reason for this belief seems to be that James covers the topic of works, of the things that man does on the outside, while Romans speaks extensively on faith. The reason for this: Romans is a thorough explanation of the gospel, showing that all men have broken God’s law, that God offers a righteousness that comes by faith alone, and that believers are enabled to live in righteousness. For if we have been made righteous (justification), we live righteously (sanctification) until we see the Lord and we shall be made like Him (perfection).

James covers for the most part the topic of sanctification; it seems to me that he is refuting a pervasive idea that we are saved by faith and therefore don’t have to do anything afterward. James shows that faith is not faith if it is not accompanied by action, for whatever is truly in the heart comes out. To hear and not do is to not believe; faith is evident by works, just as a tree is evident by its fruit. It doesn’t do the demons any good to merely believe that God exists, for they do not obey Him! James shows us the fruit of righteousness– belief in God evident by our obedience to His ways (not works unto salvation, as some have supposed). There is no difference between the God of Romans and the God of James, nor between the faith explained in both epistles.

“For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.” (James 2:26)

“But now having been set free from sin, and having become slaves of God, you have your fruit to holiness, and the end, everlasting life.” (Romans 6:22)

I believe that one thing is important to remember while we are in this discussion: that salvation comes through Jesus Christ only. To inherit your place in heaven, you must enter through the narrow gate, and walk on the narrow path. There are many in the Christian church today who are just living the culture. They try to start living the Christian life, and as they go along, try to understand the ways of God and get their theology straight.

They mentally assent that Jesus truly did live, that He died for our sins (though inwardly are a little unsure as to what that means), that He rose again, that He sent the Holy Spirit, and that He wrote the Bible. But they have not entered through the narrow gate! They have not realized the heinous crime they’ve committed by breaking God’s law, been filled with the shame of being responsible for the punishment of God’s blameless, Holy Lamb. They have not let go of everything that would hold them back from surrendering to the awesome love and power of the mercy of God through Jesus Christ. They have not, in a time and place, repented and trusted in Jesus for their own salvation; they have not been born of God, nor been regenerated upon receiving the Holy Spirit.

Today, people who try to walk the walk without first coming to that place of repentance will answer the question, “Have you been born again?” with something like, “Um, yeah…”, “Well…” or even “A few times.” Those who have been truly born again will answer with something akin to “Oh, yes! Do you want to talk about it?” This is because it is the biggest thing that has ever happened to them; they realize how lost they were without the grace of God, and are more than grateful to finally be alive.

Ultimately, the source of confusion on this topic is a misunderstanding of the differences between salvation and sanctification as revealed in the New Testament. The beginning factor must never be disregarded: because we have sinned, we could not do any works to get us right with God. So it is obvious that only Jesus Christ’s sacrifice grants us justification. But the greatest thing about grace is that we do not just get a free ticket to heaven; we receive a new nature, a clean slate, just as if we had never sinned. Even better, we don’t have to do it on our own, because by receiving the Holy Spirit we are empowered to live in communication with God, as He planned for us in the beginning. Just as there is a narrow gate, there is a narrow way that leads to life; no one can be reconciled to the Father but by Jesus Christ (John 14:6).

If we stray, we have the chance to repent and come back, but if we keep going off to the path which leads to death, we will surely meet it in the end. Through this temporary life on earth– just the beginning of our eternal life– we believers learn to say with the apostle Paul,

“Yet indeed I also count all things loss for the excellence of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them as rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in Him, not having my own righteousness, which is from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which is from God by faith; that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death, if, by any means, I may attain to the resurrection from the dead. Not that I have already attained, or am already perfected; but I press on, that I may lay hold of that for which Christ Jesus has also laid hold of me.” (Philippians 3:8-12)

Salvation is a once-in-a-lifetime event, just as is physical birth, and I believe and know that every person, even those already in Christianity, must seek salvation. What’s different about salvation is that that one can only receive it. Jesus said, that unless one has been born again, he cannot enter the kingdom of God, no matter how well he lived, no matter if he worked miracles, no matter how much he believed he was a Christian. There must be a point when the person is convicted deeply of sin, empties himself of all he takes pride in, comes before Jesus Christ, humbles himself, and simply receives God’s work of faith in him. Henceforth, sanctification is the lifelong process of conforming more and more to Him; thus the believer shall live until He calls us to the place He dwells, with no corruption, and he shall be perfected at last!

One last word: to anyone, anywhere, whether they have been ignoring God or living in the form of Christianity, and knows they are not saved, I would implore them to drop every devotion or duty they may have been doing previously and simply start reading the Gospels through- even if it’s just a little bit every day. Do not read them to learn how you should approach God or live before men, do not read them to learn about what it means to really be saved or to really live for God. Read them simply to observe Jesus. Examine His character. Watch how He speaks, how He lives, how He relates to people. STUDY the life of Jesus as it is. If necessary, read through all four of them over a few times, until you know what “holy” is. If you see dimly, approach the Light and all will be made clear!

You cannot claim the promises of God until you are His own! But once you are His own, you will finally see Him as your Father! Anyone reading this who has been born of God knows what that means! Dear people, do this one thing, and God will take care of you! He will look after the rest. For once you get a glimpse of His holiness, the word becomes as a mirror, and one is convicted of his wretchedness, his sin, his guilt of crucifying the son of God. He realizes his desperate need for the forgiveness of God, and comes before God emptied, with a repentant heart. A heart in this state is the heart God can work with! But it can only come with the realization of sin, which follows the wonder of Holiness Incarnate. Seek Him out; He wants to be found!