Is God Really in Control?

Guest Editor: Adam Noles – Green Forest church of Christ, Poplar Bluff, MO

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Guest Writer – Adam Noles

THE PEOPLE MOCKING Jesus didn’t know that Jesus staying on the cross was what was best for them and for the rest of humanity.

The fact that Jesus was on that tree was not because God wasn’t powerful enough to take Him down.

It wasn’t because God wasn’t loving enough – in fact, 1 John 3:16 says, “by this we know love: that He laid down his life for us.”

We can look at the cross and say, “If God’s not getting rid of the evil in my life, I can still trust that He’s all-powerful. I can still trust that he’s all-loving…”

Even the Son of God did not have evil removed from his life.

Jesus asked for this cup to pass from Him, and God told him, “No.”

He knows what’s best for us as our Father, and we have to trust him.

“And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose” (Romans 8:28).

Green Forest church of Christ, Poplar Bluff, MO.

http://www.greenforestchurchofchrist.org/audio-sermons?fbclid=IwAR0Q3yRFftFKEF1nnoaxHQhNDo2l2s3XRDjplr8tovpAV5oVkEiI6_TQn4E

What’s My BIGGEST Concern?

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FROM THE ANNISTON STAR, Religion Roundtable, March 13, 2020:

QUESTION:  “What is the most major concern facing you as a pastor?”

While I do not hold the office of “pastor” (cf. 1 Tim. 3:1ff; Tit. 1:5ff; Acts 20:28), I do claim the role of a gospel preacher (2 Tim. 4:2).  My one, over-arching concern is for people who are lost in sin (Rom. 3:23; 6:23; Lk. 19:10; 2 Thes. 1:7-9).

I’m not primarily concerned about:

  • CORONAVIRUS because, until the Lord comes, all people eventually get sick and die (1 Cor. 15:21-22; Heb. 9:27).

 

  • SOCIALISM because God is in control our world and promises to provide me with all that I need (Job 38:41; Luke 12:24; Mat. 6:33).

 

  • TERRORISM because even if I die at the hands of a murderer, I still have Jesus’s guarantee of life eternal (Mat. 10:28; Jn. 3:16; 1 Jn. 2:17), and I’m certain He’ll know how to deal with an evil-doer (Rom. 12:19).

 

  • GOVERNMENT CORRUPTION because God has been using wicked rulers for millennia, and He raises up and removes kings to fulfill His divine purpose (Dan. 2:21, 44).

 

  • CLIMATE CHANGE because God spoke the universe into existence (Gen. 1-2), He makes the sun rise and fall (Mat. 5:45), and He currently upholds the earth by His Word (Col. 1:16-17).

 

  • MEDICAL COSTS because my body will eventually return to dust (Gen. 3:19; Job 20:11; Eccl. 12:7).

 

  • CRIME because Scripture tells me evil men will grow worse and worse (2 Tim. 3:13).

 

  • POLLUTION because the earth belongs to God and one day He’s going to burn it up any way (2 Pet. 3:10).

 

Jesus asked, “For what profit is it to a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul…” (Mat. 16:26)?  His main concern is my main concern.

Do You Know The Three Nothings?

A few biblical thoughts for my high school and college friends…

 

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THE NAMES HAVE been changed, but the story is real.

Young ladies, please read this thoughtfully and prayerfully.  You could be Tracy some day:

     When they first started to date, Grant told Tracy he wanted to be “just friends”.  Tracy was happy with    the arrangement.  But then, after about a month of going out together, their relationship began to change.  It happened slowly and seemed natural enough…  Grant first put his arm around her shoulder and kept it there.  Later that evening Tracy wondered again what was happening between them when Grant gave her a good-night kiss…the question crossed her mind: Weren’t we going to be “just friends”?  But then, in the warmth of the moment, she put the thought behind her.  Within a couple of weeks, Grant’s and Tracy’s physical relationship had moved…  They weren’t merely pecking each other on the mouth.  Their kisses lingered.  And Grant’s hand, which he’d been so careful that first night never to let stray from Tracy’s shoulder, now began gliding down to the small of her back, to her side, to her hips…  At the end of a date about seven months into their relationship, he remarked, “Well, Tracy, I’ve really enjoyed our relationship, but this is going to have to be the last time we see each other for a while.  I’ve been seeing Brenda.”  “Huh?!” said Tracy, startled.  “What?!  What are you saying?!”  “I told you six months ago that I wanted to be your friend,” Grant pleaded.  “I told you I was making no commitments.”  “No commitments!” Tracy shouted.  “No commitments!  You…!”  Tears welled in her eyes as Tracy felt the bitter sting of betrayal.  How natural and innocent Grant made it sound: “I never said….”  And yet he had, hadn’t he?  By his actions (John Holzmann, Dating with Integrity, 59-60).

Like many of her peers today, Tracy made a costly mistake.  She sacrificed her virginity for the companionship of a selfish and immature young man.  She may have also relinquished the success of her future marriage by being intimate with Grant.1

I wish I had a quarter for every tear that has been shed by young Christian women who have lost their purity.  Like Tracy, their hearts have been broken, their reputations have been tainted, and the most precious gift they own has been surrendered—not to a loving and devoted husband, but to some self-indulgent interloper (1 Thess. 4:6).

Those of us who counsel try to offer comfort.  “God is forgiving” (2 Chron. 6:21; Psm. 25:18; 32:1), we promise.  The words are true and need to be internalized, but often they are marginally helpful at best.  Words, no matter how well-intentioned they may be, cannot reclaim cherished innocence and virtue.

I appreciate the guidance of one father and how he communicates moral values to his family.  Like me, he wants to protect his daughter from the pain and consequences of promiscuity.  He writes:

     Before a young man took out my daughter, he usually would come over for dinner.  Before he came I would ask my daughter, “Would you like to tell him the three nothings, or would you like for me to tell him the three nothings?”  Usually my daughter would tell him the three nothings before he arrived at the door.  However, that gave me a good opportunity when we met to merely ask the young man, “I am sure that my daughter has told you about the three nothings.”  “Yes, sir.”  “Good.  What are they?” I would ask.  “Nothing below the neck.  Nothing comes off.  And nothing lying down.”  “Super!” I would reply.  “I just want you to know that I know them.  My daughter knows them and [now] you know them” (Douglas M. Cecil, The 7 Principles of an Evangelistic Life, 125-126).

Young ladies, God’s plan for your happiness requires that sex be kept pure and beautiful (1 Thess. 4:3-8; Gen. 2:24-25; Prov. 5:19-20; Song of Solomon).  This doesn’t mean the complete absence or denial of passion, but rather the proper directing of such within the boundaries of a lifelong, committed, Christian marriage (Heb. 13:4).

Can you remember the three nothings?  “For this is the will of God, your sanctification, that you should abstain from sexual immorality” (1 Thess. 4:3).

1/ “Couples who strongly believe that sex outside of marriage is wrong are…31 percent more satisfied with their sex lives” (Bethesda Research Group, quoted by William R. Mattox Jr., “The Hottest Valentine,” Washington Post, 1994).  “Those who cohabitate or live together before marriage have a 50 percent higher possibility of divorce than those who do not” (M. D. Newcomb and P. M. Bentler, “Assessment of Personality and Demographic Aspects of Cohabitation and Marital Success,” Journal of Personality Assessment 44, 1980, 21).  “Researchers at UCLA discovered that not only do those who cohabitate have a higher level of divorce, they are more likely to commit adultery once they get married” (Chip Ingram, Love, Sex, and Lasting Relationships, 2003, 147).  A study conducted by the University of South Carolina suggests that those who abstain from sex before marriage have the highest rates of marital fidelity (Ibid).  “The introduction of sex in a dating relationship is almost always the ushering in of the breakup of that relationship” (Les and Leslie Parrott, Relationships, 1998, 138).