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Student Ministry - April 2021

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Dear Church Family,

Recently I was asked by one of our students what to think about the fact that their friends say they believe in Jesus, but also affirm the idea that people should be able to live however they want. This is specifically related to the LGBTQ+ lifestyle. This is a normal question that our students and even elementary students have to grapple with at school. It is a question that we cannot avoid. It is a reality that is going to confront Christians at every turn, and has begun attacking Christian schools, universities, and organizations. How should we respond when the world expects us to get in line with its philosophies of gender and sexuality norms?

The answer to that question really depends on a few things. The main thing it depends on is who you want to please. There are only two options to choose from when it comes to being pleasing. You can either be pleasing to men or pleasing to God. You can either serve the world, or you can serve God. They are mutually exclusive. But isn’t that exactly what the world disagrees with? They think you can serve both God and men. But that is not what God says. In James 4:4 He clearly states: “You adulteresses, do you not know that friendship with the world is hostility toward God? Therefore whoever wants to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.” So if you want to please men, then all you need to do is agree with them and disagree with God. It is pretty simple, but it has dire consequences.

I think that deep down inside, people know they shouldn’t agree with the philosophies of the world. That is why the decision to adopt an LGBTQ+, or any other sinful lifestyle, usually takes some time and serious consideration. Sometimes, though, it is only a difficult decision because they have a hard time deciding which people to please. But what about people who don’t care about pleasing men, but rather want to please God? How do we respond to the pressure of the world to conform to their ideals? The Bible is really helpful with this (shocker). Romans 12 says to us “And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.” If you want to please God, the only way to do that is by letting Him transform you by the Word in the gospel of Jesus Christ. We go to Jesus just as we are, sin and all. But Jesus changes us and transforms our thoughts and way of life. This is what the world just can’t stand.

This is not a belligerent take at the LGBTQ+ community or anything like that. This is just where our students live. They are constantly bombarded by these questions, and they need answers. This is simply a statement of non-conformity to the status quo. I’ve been bullied a lot before as I was growing up, and I expect to be pushed around as a Christian adult too. But that is just going to make me more non-conformist and more gospel transformist. If this is where our students live, then we must help them reject and stand up to the bullying of the world. We must help them go to Jesus in the Word and be transformed in their minds. We must help them understand what God says is right versus what people think is right. And we must pray that God would soften their hearts to believe Him and desire to please Him instead of the world. And this we must do all with the right attitude. So my prayer is that God would transform us to be like Jesus. That we would take hard stands against His enemies, all while loving them and desiring them to turn and be saved.

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Student Ministry - March 2021

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Dear Church Family,

As I ponder our world, it becomes clearer to me that people are unsatisfied in life. What I mean is that everywhere you look, people seem to be angry, frustrated, depressed, anxious, afraid, lonely, bored, and wanting something different out of life. This is all generally speaking, but you don’t have to look far to see that these unsatisfied feelings have permeated our culture at large. And nowhere do I see this more than in the younger generations. And while this is nothing new, it certainly is much more widespread and universally felt now than in recent years past.

But why are people feeling so dissatisfied? What is causing this pandemic of emotional dismay? I believe scripture gives us the answer. Jesus tells us in Matthew 5:6 “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied.” This means that, by God’s grace, He gives joy to those who desire His goodness and justice above all other desires in their lives. Based on this biblical perspective and our current cultural milieu, we see that the people are feeling the results of pursuing sinful desires in their lives. Put plainly, our culture does not hunger and thirst for righteousness, and is, therefore, a culture of dissatisfaction.

Recently I was watching a biopic about William Tyndale, the Englishman who was eventually martyred in 1536 for translating the Bible into English for the common people. One thing that struck me was a scene between Tyndale and a Christian merchant who helped smuggle English Bibles into the country. They were discussing whether or not the people even wanted to have the Bible in their own language. As that question was posed, the merchant cut open a sack of some kind of grain and pulled out a large stack of Bibles. He then exclaimed, “the people are hungry!” 

That made me wonder, are people hungry for God today? Do they even know that there is something better than what they are hungering for in their sinful hearts? Do the younger generations know that they can have satisfaction if only they would desire the Lord? Well, I didn’t know that until someone told me and showed me. It took people intentionally and patiently investing God’s word into my life for me to see how much satisfaction could really be found in Christ. Even as a young Christian I sought satisfaction in my worldly circumstances, but could never get it. But as faithful men and women vibrantly lived out their walk with God for me to see, I grew in my desire for righteousness, and therefore in satisfaction in Christ. 

Who is near you who is hungering and thirsting for the wrong things? Is there a way for you to intentionally and patiently invest your love for God and the Word in their lives? Do you need someone else to help show you that true satisfaction exists and what it looks like in real life? Please come talk to me or any of the pastors about this. We want to help people hunger and thirst for God, so they can live satisfied lives no matter the circumstances.

 

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