It's my money and I need it NOW!

Do you remember those old commercials? Some intentionally pathetic looking person is facing a shortage of cash when suddenly, a strange old man enters the scene and becomes their financial guru about their cash settlement.

He urges them to realize that it's their money! Their needs command the need to adopt his mantra, "It's my money and I need it NOW!" 


While I do not have a cash settlement with anyone, I often feel like my bills and financial duties have adopted the creepy grandfather's mantra in my life; they are my bills and they need my money NOW!

I then find there are people and causes who seem to have adopted the same mantra- they need my money NOW!

Then I read my BIble and find God saying (pardon the irreverence)- He needs my money NOW!

It is like it is all spoken for!!!


Is it a bad thing though? Certainly, it can feel taxing and grating at times but I want us to consider if it is a bad thing.

If God allows us to have any source of income or resources, that is an avenue of His provision- praise Him!

If God allows those resources to cover our necessities and even some wants- praise Him!

If God calls us to utilize those resources for the Gospel to advance- praise Him!


I fear this unhelpful, even unnecessary, attachment (my money) or attachment (something or someone always demands it) creates resistance to God's intended desires through the temporal system of goods and monies.


Let's remember:

  1. God is a giver- Start in Genesis with God giving life and you find one of His continual attributes on display throughout the Bible.

  2. God gives to everyone- Continue by recognizing God's undeserved care for the "just and the unjust".

  3. God gives to His people- One of the GREATEST perks of being a follower of God is knowing what goods and monies are REALLY for- His glory, advancing His causes, and growing our trust in Him.

  4. God changes us through giving- Our flesh rebels against giving SO HARD because God uses it to teach us about Him, eternity, love, trust, and contentment.

  5. God confronts unbelievers through our giving- Without being braggadocious, our conversation and conduct should declare our involvement and outlook about Gospel giving, possessions, and financial goals; this is so antithetical to the unsaved that the Spirit can use that as a mighty apologetic.

As we kick off Missions Month, I am well aware of the difficulty each of us find ourselves in due to inflation and economic uncertainty. The call for each of us to consider giving sacrificially for the Gospel will not be given out of a tone-deaf echo chamber as gas is still almost $4 for me as well. 

What I am asking for us to remember is the goodness of God, the help of His grace, the eternal impact we can have, and the resistance we will face from our own flesh. 

Don't let the creepy strange man's philosophy on money thwart God's incredible journey He is calling you to embark on this month.

Pastor Paul

Easter Recap

DEAR FRIENDS,

The easter season is over! Sigh of relief right? For many of you, that season brought long hours of work, extra times of serving, and maybe the stress of making sure everything turned out for the Easter lunch. I wanted to take a minute and talk about our Easter here at Faith Baptist!

First, I want to say thank you to everyone that was a part of the many ways people were serving for our Easter outreach. If you were a part of hanging door flyers, putting together eggs, putting together gift bags, volunteering at the egg hunt, serving the breakfast, serving as a greeter, or even just simply praying for the weekend, rejoice at what God was able to do at Faith Baptist. We want to say thank you as a pastoral staff to all of you living out your faith by serving Christ’s church. We cannot and should not attempt to take any credit for the results of the weekend, but we can rejoice in the privilege we had to be a part of the Gospel going forward into our community.

For those that worked at our egg hunt, I want to say a special thank you for being there in the cold serving with a great attitude and a welcoming smile! We received so many thank you’s from the families involved, and you all are a large part of making that happen. Be encouraged that we had 11 of the 95 families from the egg hunt join us the next morning for Easter Sunday

Second, I wanted to encourage you to be in prayer for the follow-up on all of our Easter guests. Pray for Pastor Paul as he preaches a great message as we hope to have many visitors back from last week. Be in prayer for those who perhaps were not able to make it last week, but are going to join us tomorrow. Pray that we will see many of the families return for our Parent’s Night Out on May 20th.

Last, be on the lookout tomorrow for any guests that we may have joining us and prioritize making them feel welcome. Look for ways that you can engage with those around you in a positive way that begins to tear down the walls they may have about attending church. For many people, visiting somewhere new can be a very daunting experience. We can be an instrument that God can use to help ease their fears. It may look like taking some time and walking them to the kids' classes or even just answering a question. Either way, be ready tomorrow to smile and welcome people to Faith!

Sincerely,

Pastor Derek

A Sparkly, Frilly, and mostly over-the-top Pink Dress

DEAR FRIENDS,

If you have been around my wife for any length of time, stepped into our home, or reviewed our past Amazon baby registry (not an announcement)…you have probably noticed that Laurie is a huge fan of neutrals. She gravitates towards a variety of muted shades that would appear to lack color and yet present slight underlying hues that change with different lighting. Her design palette falls somewhere in between Joanna Gaines and Switzerland. The other day, I found a very sparkly, frilly, and mostly over-the-top pink dress that just so happened to fit my 11-month-old daughter. So naturally, being the helpful husband that I am…I set out to indulge my sweet daughter and introduce her to the land of fairy princesses, bubble gum, and unicorns and dressed her up. Naturally, three out of four people in our small family were very impressed with the dress. Intrinsically, Hazel was the most excited, pulling at the sparkles and shouting (in baby): “Look mom at this very pink dress!.” Keep reading, I'll come back to this story in just a moment...
 

This week, I found encouragement from reading a familiar passage out of Galatians 6: “Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such an one in the spirit of meekness; considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted. Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ.”

 

Galatians 6 reminds us that sin is a present reality in the life of every Christian. Therefore, Paul urges Spirit-led believers to recognize and execute the practical responsibilities of spiritual accountability within the household of faith. The Spirit works in us to help us love one another, not to devour one another (Gal. 5:15) nor to provoke and envy one another (Gal. 5:26). These truths lead us to recognize that we are corporately responsible for the spiritual health of others within our local body! Whether you crave spiritual accountability or not… Whether you see the need for it, or not — Scripture commands us to actively participate in the spiritual lives of other believers as commanded in Galatians 6 being fully enabled by the same Holy Spirit of Galatians 5. So how can we participate in God’s necessary plan of Biblical accountability?

 

1) Pick Them Up OR Be Picked Up (vs 1)
Paul starts with common familial language. Paul begins by saying, “Brothers, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such an one in the spirit of meekness;” Let’s get this out of the way: the church is a spiritual family and you need a family to care for you spiritually. The church is a “household” (6:10) of brothers and sisters who call God “Abba, Father!” (4:6). Some may ask why do I need spiritual accountability? The answer: the inevitability of sin’s deceptive attraction. Paul says that sometimes those in the family get “overtaken in a fault.” They are guilty of transgression or sin. Satan sets traps and sometimes we fall into these schemes. This is why we need each other to pry open the traps and set us free. James would refer to the idea of wandering from the truth like this: Brethren, if any of you do err from the truth, and one convert him; 20 Let him know, that he which converteth the sinner from the error of his way shall save a soul from death, and shall hide a multitude of sins (Jas 5:19–20). Clearly, this accountability IS NOT liberty for each of us to become the “righteousness police.” Paul was not encouraging believers to inspect every detail of a person’s life. Nonetheless, if one is struggling with sexual sin, pride, discontentment, doubt, or discouragement; the Scriptures call us to avail ourselves to the grace of God through the help of His people.

 

2) Hold Them Up OR Be Held Up (vs 2-5)
Those who are living in sin need our help (v. 1), and those who are burdened need our help (v. 2). If a Christian brother or sister is weighed down by some burden, then we have a responsibility to bear that burden. In our flesh, we are often concerned with our own problems but the Spirit produces love involving our care for other brothers and sisters. Our daily mission should be to stand alert to the burdens of others and devote ourselves to making them lighter. Paul assumes that the Galatians will have burdens. Why? They are unavoidable. They may come in the form of mental illness, physical illness, financial crisis, sin, addiction, or family crises. Paul not only assumes that we will have burdens, but that we cannot carry all of our own burdens. Undoubtedly, we must always first cast our burdens on the Lord knowing that He will sustain us. Following this, we should seek out accountability and help from the body.

 

3) Build Them Up OR Be Built Up (vs 6)
Verse 6 can be confusing. The seemingly obvious interpretation and the most common one is that Paul is exhorting congregations to pay their pastors fairly. Although that principle is taught in the New Testament, it does not seem to be what Paul is teaching here. He has just been talking about restoring sinning brothers, and in verses 7-8 he talks about sowing and reaping in the flesh or by the Spirit. The verse seems to indicate that the “sharing of all good things” is the third step to spiritual accountability with other believers. The spiritual Christian who has picked up and held up his fallen brother also builds him up in the Word, in whose “good things” (teaching/righteous living) they fellowship together.

 

Spiritual accountability is not a regular practice in the lives of many believers. Why? I believe that the American church can aid in deep spiritual deception. Just like a silly, frilly, and over-the-top dress, one can walk into church, show off all of their spiritual victories, and mask the true struggle of sin that they battle every day. The Scriptures call us to something higher. The day-to-day may appear more plain, neutral, and not as glamorous. However, the reward of participating in Biblical accountability is worth it in our fight against sin for the glory of God!

Sincerely,

Pastor Jordan