Saturday, August 27, 2016

An Inviting God



Sermon Notes, August 28, 2016 AM
An Inviting God
Steve W. Reeves

INTRODUCTION:
A. Oscar Wilde told the story of “Aunt Jane,” who lived alone and received very few
    visitors. When her new neighbors threw a lavish party Aunt Jane determined that she
    would not be outdone. She decided to host her own ball. Immediately she set to
    work. The old house was repainted, refurnished and the grounds replanted. The
    gourmet food and the band were ordered from London. An army of servants was
    hired. Everything would be of the best quality with no question of cost. At last the
    anticipated night arrived. The drive was lit for two miles with colored lights. The hall
    and staircase were gorgeously decorated with fresh flowers. The ballroom floor was
    as shiny as a mirror. The bandsmen, dressed in formal attire, bowed as Aunt Jane,
    adorned in a splendid diamond studded gown, descended the staircase and waited
    beside the door. Time passed but no guests arrived. Finally, after midnight Aunt Jane
    swept a deep curtsey to the band and said, “Go and have your supper. No one is
    coming.” Aunt Jane lived the rest of her life regretting that no one came to her party.
    Only after her death was it discovered that she had forgotten to mail the invitations.
    1. Most people love to receive invitations to such great occasions as Aunt Jane’s ball.
    2. Sometimes we may not be on the guest list. How does that make you feel? I still
        remember a time when I was a child and a neighboring child had a birthday party
       outside in full view and I wasn’t invited.
B. I want to emphasize two things about God.
    1. He doesn’t forget the invitations.
    2. He doesn’t show favoritism in who He invites. God is an inviting God.
    3. There is an Old Testament prophet who said a great deal about the invitation of
       God.
       a. Isaiah was an 8th century B.C. prophet in Judah.
       b. He used hyperbole and metaphors to describe a coming Messiah who would
           bless all nations.
       c. As we look at Isaiah through the lense of the New Testament we have a better
           understanding of these terms. Wonderful, counselor, prince of peace, Immanuel,
           the branch, the suffering servant. All of these terms given 700 years before
           Jesus.
C. In Isaiah 55 there is a series of four imperatives that describe God’s invitation. They
    are the words: “Come,” “Listen,” “Seek” and “Return.”
 
I. COME
    A. Everyone who thirsts – vs. 1
       1. There is such a thirst for God in our culture and we do not see it.
       2. Augustine said, “God shaped hole in every person.” In America we’re trying to
           stuff that hole with everything else but God. Money, Possessions, Power,
           Privilege, Position.
       3. God says, “Everyone who thirsts come to the waters.” 
           a. Could there be a more appropriate metaphor for life?
           b. Your body needs two and a half quarts of water each day to function properly.
               If you become dehydrated you can suffer serious problems and even death.
           c. God uses this picture of water to convey a deeper message of eternal life.
               In John 4 Jesus was at Jacob’s well in Samaria when a woman came to draw
               water from the well. According to verse 7 Jesus asked the woman for a drink.
               She responded by asking why He, a Jew, made such a request of her, a
               Samaritan. Jesus responded by saying in verse 10, “If you knew the gift of
               God, and who it is who says to you, ‘Give Me a drink,’ you would have asked
               Him, and He would have given you living water.”
           d. What a magnificent thought. Water from a well that never runs dry. Water of
               life. Water of hope. Water from an unending, unpolluted, unfathomable source.
           e. 700 years before Jesus was born Isaiah pointed to Him and said, “Come to the
               water of life.”
    B. Everyone who is hungry - verse 1b.
       1. “And you who have no money come, buy and eat, come, buy wine and milk
           without money and without cost.”
           a. Economics 101 tells us there is no such thing as a “free lunch.” There is cost
               involved.
           b. Our spiritual dilemma is that we need the nourishment only God can provide
               but we have no money (we have no righteousness or merit) to purchase it.
       2. There is good news! Someone has paid for your meal. Occasionally someone
           will give us a “Gift Card” to Chili’s, Olive Garden, Cracker Barrel or even,
           “Sonic.” I enjoy those meals because I know someone cared enough for me to
           pay for them.
       3. Who has paid for your meal? The Suffering Servant of chapter 53. The one who
           has born our iniquities. The one by whose stripes we are healed. The one on
           whom God has laid our transgressions even though we, like sheep, have gone
           astray.
       4. That Suffering Servant has an invitation for you. “Come to me all you who are
           weary and burdened and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn
           of me for I am meek and lowly in heart and you will find rest unto your soul”
           (Matthew 11:28-30).        

II. LISTEN
    A. In verse 2 we read, “Listen carefully to me and eat what is good and delight
       yourself in abundance. God invites us to satisfy our holy hunger by coming to His
       banquet table. This is not a snack. It is a banquet of abundance          
       1. I heard a story about a man who died and went to God’s banqueting table. His
           wife joined him there and they delighted in the abundance of delicacies. She
           said, “this is all worth it.” He replied, “Yes, and I could have had it years ago if
           you had not put me on that low carb, no sugar, fat free diet.”
       2. God doesn’t skimp.
    B. In verse 3 - “Incline your ear and come to Me. Listen, that you may live; Why does
       God want us to listen?
       1. He says, “I will make an everlasting covenant with you according to the faithful
           mercies shown to David.” It’s going to be a covenant for all people.
       2. J.M. McCalep, (1861 – 1953) along with W.K. Azbill went to Japan in the 1990’s
           to do mission work. McCaleb was one of the great pioneers of missions among
           churches of Christ.  In 1921 he wrote a song entitled, “The Gospel Is For All.” “Of  
           one the Lord has made the race, through one has come the fall. Where sin has  
           gone must go his grace the Gospel is for all. “
       3. This was the covenant of which God was speaking and why it was imperative for
           Isaiah’s audience to listen.

III. SEEK
    A.  The third component of God’s invitation is found in verse 6. “Seek the Lord while
       He may be found. Call upon Him while He is near.” There are many admonitions
       about seeking God.
       1. Psalm 9:10 – “For you, O Lord, have not forsaken those who seek You.”
       2. Psalm 14:2 – “The Lord has looked down from heaven upon the sons of men
          To see if there are any who understand, who seek after God.”
       3. Three times in the Sermon on the Mount. Matthew 6:33; 7:7, 8.
    B. What did Isaiah mean when he said, “Seek the Lord while He may be found?”
       1. Is God playing “hide and seek?” Is He trying to avoid us?
       2. For each of us there is a window of opportunity to find God. God is not going
           anywhere but we will. You will not always have the opportunity to find God you
           have today.
           a. Your heart may become hard. Romans 1 is a good picture of what happens
                when people’s hearts become hard.
           b. One of these days you are going to have your last chance to seek and find
               God. You will hear the last sermon you’ll ever hear. You will sing the last
               invitation song you’ll ever sing. You’ll walk through the doors of the church
               building for the final time. The next time you come through them there may
               be six men carrying you.

IV. RETURN
    A. The final component is in verse 7 – “Let the wicked forsake his way and the
       unrighteous man his thoughts; and let him return to the Lord, And He will have
       compassion on him, and to our God, for He will abundantly pardon.”
    B. There has to be a change of direction. Occasionally I use my Navigator phone
       app. Sometimes when I have missed an address or missed a turn it says, “Turn
       right.” “Turn around.”  Isaiah 55:7 is like a spiritual navigator saying, “Turn around.”
       “Return to me.”
    C. When Jesus came His message was still the same. “Repent.”

CONCLUSION:
A. The greatest invitation you’ll ever receive is the one that comes from God. His
    invitation is real, valid, necessary and applicaple to each of us today. It is the
    invitation to:
    1. Come
    2. Listen
    3. Seek
    4. Return
B. May we assist you as you respond “An Inviting God” while we stand and sing?

         



Saturday, August 20, 2016

Your Story - God's Story



Sermon Notes, August 21, 2016 A.M.
Your Story - God’s Story
 Steve W. Reeves


INTRODUCTION
A. What is your favorite story?
    1. Each summer our children at West Side participate in a reading program. It has
       been fascinating to hear them tell about the stories they have read.
    2. Maybe you remember the stories you were told in your childhood. “Goldilocks and
       the Three Bears,” “Cinderella,” “Sleeping Beauty.” My children enjoyed a book by
       Judith Viorst, Alexander and The Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day.
    2. Perhaps you enjoy reading novels by John Grisham, Mary Higgins Clark , Nicholas
       Sparks or another popular author. I have a friend in Mississippi who has recently
       written a novel entitled, The Epitaph of Jonas Barloff.
B. There are two stories I want to investigate today.
    1. The first is a story with which you are intimately familiar. It’s the story of your life.
       Each day you turn to a blank page and write upon it. As the weeks, months and
       years march by you move from chapter to chapter. There are the days of childhood,
       grade school, junior high, high school, college, young adulthood, career, family and
       retirement.
       a. Some of you are beginning a new chapter in your lives this weekend as you
           begin your college years. It’s a time of excitement coupled with nervousness. On  
           my first Sunday as a freshman at Harding. I attended the College church where  
           Jim Woodruff said, “You are like a coconut being dropped from the tree.”
       b. For some parents this is a new chapter as your child begins college. There are
           going to be some tears today. There may also be some, “high-fives!”
    2. The other story I want to talk about is God’s story. The Bible is God’s story.
       a. 40% of the Old Testament is written in story or narrative form (Abraham and his
          descendants).
       b. The New Testament begins with the story of Jesus in the Gospels and continues
           with the story of the early church in Acts.
 C. At West Side both of these stories are important to us.

I. YOUR STORY
    A. Your story began before you were born. The preface was written by your parents
       and their parents before them. They gave you a name and set you on a course.
       1. Some people are born into good circumstances.
       2. Others are born into a life of challenge.
       3. Each of us has been influenced the tender, formative years of life.
    B. With increasing speed the chapters of your story are being written.
       1. Some chapters are filled with pleasant memories of good times, laughter,            
           happiness. When we reflect on these chapters we smile.
       2. Some chapters are funny. We look back on things we did and laugh. I fully
           intend to write a book about funny things I’ve experienced in ministry through the   
           years – like the time a squirrel ran out on the ledge of the baptistry while I was
           preaching or the time a little girl was singing, “Hallelujah, hide the jewelry.” The
           Bible says, “A cheerful heart is good medicine” (Prov. 17:22).
       3. There are chapters in life that are filled with suspense and intrigue. As we write
           them we are not certain of the outcome.
       4. There are chapters of great joy and chapters of pain. Some chapters are filled
           with success while others reflect bitterness and defeat.
       6. There are chapters in life where faith seems strong and God seems so real.
           There are other chapters that contain doubts and where you wonder where God  
           is because He seems so far away.
    C. What is your story?

II. GOD’S STORY
    A. There is another story that is indispensable. It’s a story written by one who is “able
       to do  immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine (Eph. 3:20). It’s God’s story.
    B. What is God’s story?
       1. A story of love.
           a. It was out of love that God created us. Beginning with Adam all the way
               through the youngest baby here every person born has been the object of
               God’s love.  
           b. God is love (1 Jn. 4:7-8). Love must be shared or else it is not love. We have
               been created as recipients of God’s love. Our lives are never complete until
               we open our hearts and allow His love to flow through us.
           c. Before sin entered the world God’s love was shared without any impediment.
               Man’s needs were completely met. God provided nourishment, purpose and
               companionship.
           d. Satan tried to undermine God’s love. He drove a wedge between God and
               people called sin. It is a terrible thing because of what it does.
               1.) It separates man from God – Isaiah 59:1-2.
               2.) It destroys people’s lives and families.
               3.) It results in spiritual death – Romans 6:23.
           e. Satan underestimated the enormity of God’s love and the extent to which God
               would go to reclaim us.
       2.  God’s story is a story of redemption.
           a. It’s the story of a God who is so passionate about us He refuses to give up on
               us.
               1.) In Genesis 6 humanity’s sin was so great that God was grieved that He had
                    ever created man. He refused to give up. He saved mankind through Noah
                    and his family.
               2.) He told a man named Abram that he would become the father of a great
                    nation and that through his descendants all nations of the world would be
                    blessed. The Old Testament is the story of Abraham’s descendants who
                    were the heirs of God’s promise.
               3.) He chose Abraham’s grandson Jacob and changed his name to Israel.  
                    Israel’s descendants became a great nation – a nation through whom God
                    wanted to demonstrate love and loyalty. A nation that was the object of
                    God’s steadfast love that never ceases and mercies that never come to an
                    end.
               4.) As the chapters of Israel’s story were written we read about their
                    enslavement and God’s deliverance. We read about the conquest of the
                    land God promised to them. You would think they would be eternally
                    grateful to God for everything He had done but they weren’t. They often
                    rejected Him and yet God never gave up on his people.
           b. The story seemed to reach a dead end as God’s people were slaughtered     
               and enslaved by foreign nations. God, however, used the prophet Jeremiah to
               say, “I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you
               and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future” (Jeremiah 29:11).
          c. With each chapter of God’s unfolding story the anticipation increased as God
               pointed to the one who would fulfill the promises He had made.
    C. And then it happened –
 “And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night. And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were sore afraid. 10 And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. 11 For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord. 12 And this shall be a sign unto you; Ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger. 13 And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying,14 Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men” (Luke 2:8-14 KJV).
       1. God’s story finds its fulfillment in Jesus. “The Word became flesh and made his
           dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the one and only Son,
           who came from the  Father, full of grace and truth” (Jn. 1:14).
       2. The key to understanding God’s story is to see Jesus.
           a. See Jesus reaching out to those who were sick and cut off from society.
           b. See Jesus extending friendship to sinners and showing love to those who
               were despised by others. Those who had been forgotten and downtrodden.
           c. See Jesus teaching, loving, serving and caring.
       3. And then, He was crucified. Rejected by the ones He came to save. Subjected to
           the cruelest behavior imaginable. Beaten, whipped, humiliated and nailed to a
           cross. It seemed as if the story had come to a tragic end and a cataclysmic
           failure.
       4. But God wasn’t finished. On the third day Jesus was raised, Paul says, “He
           appeared to Cephas, and then to the Twelve. After that, he appeared to more
           than five hundred of the brothers and sisters at the same time.
       5. God’s story was not finished. It had just begun. The church Jesus promised to
           build was established. It is the body of Christ and He is its head. From its
           beginning in the first century until today the church is the
           ongoing story of God.

III. THE GOSPEL – THE INTEGRATION OF GOD’S STORY AND YOUR STORY.
   A. Here is the good news. God wants His story to become your story. It is through our
       relationship with Christ that God’s story intersects with our story.
       1. When this happens there is a tremendous power that comes into your life. This is
           why Paul wrote in Romans 1:16 that the Gospel is God’s power unto salvation.
       2. He’s describing what happens with the integration of God’s story and your story.
    B. Following the death of Robin Williams in August of 2014 there was a great deal
       written about the tragic circumstances Williams faced. Theologian Fred Buechner
       wrote, "It is absolutely crucial, therefore, to keep in constant touch with what is
       going on in your own life's story and to pay close attention to what is going on in
       the stories of others' lives. If God is present anywhere, it is in those stories that
       God is present. If God is not present in those stories, then they are scarcely worth
       telling."

CONCLUSION:
A. Where do you want your story to go? If someone were to read your story 100 years
    from now what would they read? The answer is being determined by the chapters
    you are writing today.
B. A young man in High School was visiting his grandfather who asked him what his
    plans for life were. The young man thought for a moment and answered, “I’m going to
    graduate from high school and go to college to get a business degree.” The
    grandfather replied, “wonderful, what then?” The young man said, “I may go on and
    get a Master’s degree and then get a job with a good salary.” “Splendid,” said the
    grandfather, “what then?” I’d like to find a nice girl to marry, settle down and have a
    family.” Grandfather said, “that’s great, what then?” This was becoming more
    difficult for the young boy. “I guess we’ll have children and raise them and I’ll continue
    to work to support them.” “That’s right,” grandfather said, “what then?” “Well, I guess
    I’ll work, raise my kids and then retire like you.” “Yes,” the old man said, “what then?”
    The boy hesitated and said, “I guess I’ll die.” “That’s right, grandfather said, “what
    then?”
C. God’s greatest desire is for His story to become your story.
D. We’d love to help you as you write the story of your life today. If you are ready to
    confess faith in Christ, turn away from sin and be baptized into Christ we will gladly
    assist you. If you need to rededicate your life to Him we will pray with you. Come as
    we stand and sing.

Courage and Conviction

  Courageous Con viction Steve W. Reeves steve@wschurch.net stevereevesoutlines.blogspot.com INTRODUCTION: A. In his book, Tragedy In The Ch...