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What’s After Life? – Luke 16:19-31

Several men went on a weeklong fishing trip.   Each day they would stop for bait and ice, there was an old man sitting on porch and the first day he said, “It’s going to rain today.” And sure enough it did. The next day, the men asked, “Is it going to rain old man?” “NO Fair all day, but a might chilly”, sure enough fair all day, a little chilly.  All week they went to him to find out the weather.  On the last day, “what’s the weather?” “I don’t know,” the man replied. “Don’t know?” “No my radio is broken.”   He only spoke of what he knew.

In our parable Jesus moves beyond the range of our experiences into the world of the unknown.  He speaks of the visible and invisible equally and open.  He is just as familiar with heaven and hell as we are rich and poor.  It is what he knows because Jesus is God.

Jesus starts the parable “A certain rich man,” and describes common characteristics of a wealthy lifestyle at that time. He then contrasts him with a poor man and common characteristics of what the poor would deal with.

Why the opposites? Some thought that this was directed to the Pharisees and Sadducees who taught and believed that riches meant you were blessed by God and poverty was a curse, sickness was the judgment of God, it meant you were being punished.  Have you ever heard this?  It is not true.  That is why Jesus went around healing everyone to show God’s compassion.  He had to even correct his disciples. Whose fault is it this man is blind his or his parents, Jesus said neither.   Jesus is showing them the opposite can be true.

 My status in society does not determine my status before God

My life on earth will end.

No matter how many medical advances we come up with, the death rate is still and will always be 100%.

Lots of people have their whole lives mapped out before them of where they would like to be 10, 20, 50 years from now. But not very many have taken time to consider and prepare for where they will be 1,000,000 years from now. Have you? Are you prepared to face death?

Both men died, this is their only similarity. The inevitable happened both died it was the mercy of God in the order of their deaths.  Lazarus died first being delivered from his miseries on earth, the rich man dying second with God giving him longer period that he may repent and turn to Him.

The time came when the beggar died” (vs 22a)

The rich man also died and was buried (vs. 22c)

In that culture, when wealthy people passed away, the family hired mourners, purchased costly spices for the body and used an elaborate tomb for the burial. The whole town probably turned out for the funeral of the rich man and listened to the shrieks and lamentations of the professional weepers and the litany of praise heaped upon the rich man by countless eulogies. The rich man has a burial, professional mourners and a fancy procession, flags at half-mast.  It probably made the Jerusalem Headline news. Today he would be mentioned by all the major news outlets.  He was laid in a tomb, in a cave, carved into a hill, which was very expensive.

On earth wealth is a big deal.  We know the name of the rich and famous

Here the names of the rich are known and when they are talked about they are designated by name.  Who owns the Dallas cowboys? Microsoft Corporation?  Who’s the queen of England?

But the poor are not known or considered worthy of being noted unless they commit some crime.  In this story it is totally opposite of life on earth. No name for rich man.   A “certain” rich man, but the poor man is called by name. Lazarus.  This is the opposite of the way it normally is.

No Burial for Lazarus.  No pomp on earth, since he could not afford a burial plot he was probably throw in the city dump, a place called Gehenna or Hinnom where they would throw trash, dead animals and bodies of malefactors, outcasts and lepers.  That’s why when Jesus was crucified they asked Pilot for his body for burial.  If the family didn’t ask for the body it would be thrown in the dump.

No earthly burial, but look what happens.  The poor man that no one served and only dogs attended to is carried by ANGELS to Abraham’s side. What is that? This is to represent the best place of honor.  For Jews Abraham was the father of their race and their faith. To be considered a friend of Abraham was the highest honor possible and true happiness would be to spend eternity at his side.

I will end up in one of two places.

  •  Heaven (Paradise)

(Lazarus) the angels carried him to Abraham’s side (vs 22b)

OR

  • Hell (Hades in the Greek)

In hell, where he was in torment (vs. 23)

We may not like the topic of hell but Jesus didn’t beat around the bush about the subject.

The majority of Americans believe in hell, a poll conducted by US News and World Report (2000) reveals that more Americans then believe in Hell than they did in the 1950’s. [US News and World Report. “Hell Hath No Fury.” January 31,2000. p. 46]

I decide my destination by my faith

 This is a story about faith, when Jesus said “Abrahams side.”  We think “big deal.”  Abraham is mentioned in the New Testament 72 times.  Abraham is regarded in Scripture as being not only the great patriarch (Hebrews 7:4) but also the father of all believers (Romans 4:11).  He was the father of the faith.  So to say Lazarus is leaning against Abraham is to say he is the son with the most faith of all!

 You are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus… If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.” Galatians 3:26&29

 If you have ever traveled out of the country you will need a passport.  In order to get into heaven we will need a heavenly passport.  The bible records in Revelation 20 that our names get written in the “Lambs Book of Life.”  This is your passport to heaven.  Do you have your name written there? I am not talking about intellectual assent.  “Yeah I believe I need a passport.” Have you gotten it?  “No I haven’t gotten around to it.    In order to get one you have to sign up, fill out the paperwork and pay the fee.  Well our heavenly fee has been paid but we need to sign up.  We need to say, “Thank you Jesus for dying for my sins, I turn from them and invite you into my life.”   You need to do this not just think about it.

We must not forget that the primary intention of the parable is about the consequences of unbelief.   Remember…

  • Riches do not equal hell. Unbelief = Hell

Have you noticed every parable we have looked at, the stories Jesus tells deal with money?  It is because money is the acid test of your faith.

  • Selfishly living for me with little concern for anyone else is a RESULT of unbelief.

If we spend all our money on ourselves and God gets little or leftovers, I hope we see that we have unbelief.  Our belief is that our money is our security and our faith is in that.  We are no different than the rich man.  I am not talking about religion.  The rich man had religion, “Father Abraham” he said.  Jesus says, “not everyone who says to me “Lord, Lord will enter the kingdom of heaven but he who does the will of my Father.”  Matthew 7:21 It’s more than talk.  It’s more than belief.  James says, “faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.”  (James 2:17)

As a pastor I must urge you to examine the faith that you claim.  Examine your actions.  What do they reveal?  I don’t want you to end up like the rich man, deceived by a false faith.

Darrell

www.Upwards.Church

Facebook: Upwards Church

 

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Storms are Coming – Are we Ready?

 Patricia Goldman, the vice chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, tells a story about a stewardess who, frustrated by passenger inattentiveness during her what-to-do-in-an-emergency talk at the beginning of each flight, changed the wording and said, “When the mask drops down in front of you, place it over your navel and continue to breathe normally.” Not a single passenger noticed.

Our parable today comes at the end of Jesus famous Sermon on the Mount.  Jesus had taught a huge multitude.  They had listened with sincerity, amazement, great interest and even gladness.  What Jesus tells them is that it is not enough to listen.  Even if you listen with appreciation and with emotions deeply stirred.  If our listening is to be of any worth, it must lead to action.  This same parable is told in Matthew and this is how Jesus introduces it.  He says in Matt 7:21, “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. (NIV) 

Notice the emphasis: Not everyone who says.. but only he who does.

Not merely listening but doing.   When Jesus says, “you must be born again”  He is speaking of spiritual rebirth,  this is not merely idealism.   It must be done.

This poem summarizes this truth well:

It is not what we eat but what we digest that makes us strong;

not what we gain but what we save that make us rich;

not what we read but what we remember that makes us learned;

and not what we profess but what we practice that makes us Christians.

Tony Campollo-“We have a lot of believers in Churches.  Big Deal the Devil believes but he is not a disciple.  We need disciples!”

Here’s our parable: Luke 6:46-49

46“Why do you call me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do what I say?

47 I will show you what he is like who comes to me and hears my words and puts them into practice.

48He is like a man building a house, who dug down deep and laid the foundation on rock. When a flood came, the torrent struck that house but could not shake it, because it was well built.

49 But the one who hears my words and does not put them into practice is like a man who built a house on the ground without a foundation. The moment the torrent struck that house, it collapsed and its destruction was complete.”  (NIV)

 I’m Building My Life 

The first fact Jesus brings home to our hearts in this story is that all who hear are builders.  There are wise builders and foolish builders.  Notice that Jesus regularly divides people into two groups: those who build correctly and those who don’t.  Those people who travel the wide road and those who travel the narrow road. Those people who are spiritually alive and those who are spiritually dead.   What could be more important?  We make all kinds of differentiations:  races, socioeconomic status, political parties and the list goes on!   In the end Jesus reminds us that there are two kinds of people: Heaven bound or hell bound.

  • Am I a Wise Builder?

The wise man is a builder.  He is constructing something.  He is constructing an eternal dwelling based on his life experiences.  He is building a soul home.

  • Am I a Foolish Builder?

The same is true for the foolish man.  He too is building.  He is constructing the hovel or hut or the sty in which he is to not only spend on earth but in eternity.  I may have stock in Dell or Disney but more importantly do I have stock in heaven?

We are building in all that we do.  We are building by every thought that we think.  Every word that we speak, every plan we make every ambition we cherish.  All of these go to make the material that enters into the structure we are building.

Some of us know better but are putting shoddy stuff into our buildings anyway, materials that will not stand the test of the storm.  The lies we tell and then try to justify them.  The borrowing of something that is not ours and planning not to return is really called stealing. The crude stories, or negative remarks or criticism we passed off a joke; acting concerned while receiving information, but intending to gossip or the taking of God’s name in vain.  I saw in a magazine that they are selling this shirt that says God’s last name isn’t damn-it.  When we know you should give 10% of your income but don’t.  Those times when we should have spoken up when but remained silent.  The time we clutched your money when there is a pressing need.  The time when ignored someone that needed you. The fact that we call ourselves Christ’s followers but will not stand up when it time to for God’s people to serve.

This is the stuff that gets pastors and teachers in trouble. We don’t want to hear it.  “Tell me about God’s love and grace not my problems!”  Some of us need to tear down our cardboard box dwellings and build on the rock of Christ Jesus.

What I am Building Will Be Tested

The buildings will be tested.  We are not to build for fair weather only.  We must build with a view to the times of crises.  We must build to weather the storms.  For sooner later TO ALL the testing comes. Upon everyone storm will break.

Dr. James Dobson tells of a river rafting experience on the Rogue River in Oregon. He says at one point in the ride that they came to the most treacherous part of the river where the water was white, wild and swift in the middle was an area called the coffee pot because it bubbled and was known to suck under rafts, boats and people.  Several had died there.  He tells of his experience of his boat capsizing and him nearly drowning. It was the scariest time of his life. He says life is like that river ride.  There are long stretches where the water is calm and beautiful.  You can see your reflection if you lean over the raft.  The scenery is gorgeous, the river peaceful.  You don’t know if life could ever be better. Then without much warning you can be propelled into white water. Thrown overboard, then your sucked under grasping for air, struggling to keep your head above the water and survive.  At the time when you think it is the worst, then you hit the white water no mercy.  Please understand this will happen sooner or later.   No one travels down the river of life without some turbulence.  You might as well be ready.

That is why it is necessary to be stabilized before the crises arrive.  This is where it comes out if you built wisely or foolishly. The building of the foolish man will be tested. The building of the wise man will be tested. The storms of life hit him too.  God never promised the exemption from conflict, but his presence through it.  He doesn’t allow us to dodge the storm or the raging river and have an easy time but to face the storm and turbulence.  To all the storm and turbulence will come.

The ship that is constructed to sail only upon the glassy sea under blue skies will not do in the ocean like ours where the heavens so often become black, thunder pounds, lightning flashes and where the sea is whipped by the winds and the waves swell and crash.

Our bridges are built to sustain more than their own weight. They must stand heavy loads.  Buildings too must be built to weather the storms.  I read of snow storm in Washington where snow fell for more than 36 hours.  The snow lay deep upon the ground and upon the roofs of houses.  There was theater there, that was a building of beauty, but the architect had only sunny days in mind and the strain of the 30 inches of snow caused the roof to crash and more than 100 lives were lost.

Christ tells us frankly that the test is coming. The storms are coming.  For some you have already experienced some storms and if you weren’t built upon the rock of Jesus you wonder how you would have made it.  Others of you have seen your lives or others’ lives crash in ruins.  Or maybe you haven’t experienced many storms yet.  You will.  We must be ready by building our lives upon the truth of Jesus Christ and His word.

Will you join me in building upon Christ?

Darrell

www.Upwards.Church

https://www.facebook.com/UpwardsChurch1

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5 Reasons Gratitude Can Change Your Life

  15 So let the peace that comes from Christ control your thoughts. And be grateful. Colossians 3:15 (CEV)

  1. Gratitude makes us feel happier

Studies have confirmed that having gratitude does in fact make you feel happier. Two psychologists, Dr. Robert A. Emmons from the University of California, and Dr. Michael E. McCullough from the University of Miami, have committed much of their research careers to studying the effects of gratitude.

In one such study, the researchers asked a group of people to write a few sentences every week about a particular topic. One group was instructed to write about things that didn’t make them happy. Another was instructed to write about things that they were grateful for. And the control group was instructed to write about things that had occurred but with no focus towards being positive or negative.

The results? The group that was instructed to write about things that they were grateful for were far more happier and optimistic about their lives than the group that had focused on things that had occurred in a negative light. When we’re grateful for things, it’s a natural occurrence to be happier about life. You realize the things you have rather than the things you don’t.

It’s far easier to go about your day in a state of appreciation when you’re grateful than when you’re not. This isn’t always easy to do because we all have what’s called a “Hedonic Set Point,” or a baseline level of happiness. When that threshold is crossed one way or another, we become either unhappy or happy. This is also referred to as the Hedonic Treadmill, often related to the incessant drive to accumulate things that only bring momentary bliss but don’t offer sustained happiness.

  1. Gratitude improves the quality of our lives

From your mental health and wellness, to your emotional fortitude, spiritual aptitude, and your physical strength can all be derived from the simple and basic behavior of gratitude. Gratitude can change your life by quite literally improving the quality of it. You’re the sum of all your parts, and it’s gratitude that can help to benefit each of those small parts.

Studies have uniquely linked gratitude with satisfaction of life and it’s no secret that people who are grateful for things are far more satisfied in their lives. There’s a sound stability that exists when you can appreciate the importance of things in your life, no matter what shape, size or form factor they might take on.

However, many think that it’s easy for successful people to be grateful because they have so much to be grateful for.  Gratitude isn’t just about success, money, jobs, cars, houses, or anything else. Do these things help to improve the quality of your life? Yes, sometimes, but these things can also mean more problems.

Gratitude must be present before the attainment of large sums of money or success. When it doesn’t, people can go off the rails. In Sudden Wealth Syndrome it’s easy to see why so many lottery winners and inheritance receives go bankrupt in a very short period after the windfall of cash arrives.

  1. Gratitude reduces our innermost fears

It’s hard to be fearful and grateful at the same time. Fear is what occurs when we’re left to dwell on topics that we feel are out of our control. We extrapolate the worst-possible scenarios and picture our future plight and our eventual demise when we’re living in a state of fear.

But by being grateful, fear can be overcome. When we’re utterly grateful for everything we have, including our problems, fear has little place to live in our minds. When we’re fearful of things that put us into a state of scarcity, such as not having enough money to pay our bills or put groceries into our fridge, we’re living in a state of lack rather than a state of abundance.

Being grateful, however, puts you into a state of abundance. It instills the belief that you’re thankful for what you have, right now, in this very moment, rather than worrying about what you don’t have or won’t have at some future point in time. Often, we save our gratitude for one day of the year — Thanksgiving. On that day, we question ourselves for not being grateful every other day of the year.

And why not? Why can’t we be grateful every day of the year? Why does it take a day that’s slated for giving thanks for us to stop and actually do so? We can completely abolish much of our fears by being grateful every single day. Decide, right now, that you’ll create the daily habit of gratitude and express what your grateful for through prayer, conversations and by writing out everything you have to be grateful for, and watch as your fears dissipate over time.

4. Gratitude shifts our focus

One of the reasons why gratitude can change your life is because it shifts your focus. Life is all about focus. Whatever we focus on, we move towards. When we live in a state of negativity, we live that out.  It’s easy to see something in a negative light when you’re focused on that. It’s easy to see all the problems and dilemmas surrounding a situation when your thinking is habitually geared towards that.

In turn, it’s also easy to see things in a positive light, even when problems arise. If you’ve ever met an always-positive person, you know just how true this statement is. Even when something goes wrong, they look for the silver-lining in the situation. If they can’t find one, they simply state that something good will eventually come out of whatever they’re going through.

We can easily move from a negative state to a positive state by recounting all of the things that we have to be grateful for on a daily basis either in prayer, verbally or by writing it down.

  1. Gratitude strengthens our faith

Gratitude transforms your faith by instilling the belief that you’re not alone and that whatever it is that you’re going through, it will pass, and on the other end you’ll emerge victorious. You’ll accomplish your goals, overcome your obstacles, and become more like Christ.   There’s an appreciation for all things that occur for those that are grateful.

35 Can anything ever separate us from Christ’s love? Does it mean he no longer loves us if we have trouble or calamity, or are persecuted, or hungry, or destitute, or in danger, or threatened with death? 37 No, despite all these things, overwhelming victory is ours through Christ, who loved us. Romans 8:35-37 (NLT)

For me, it’s my belief in Jesus, that He loves me and that all things are working together, including all my problems.

Darrell

www.Upwards.Church

https://www.facebook.com/UpwardsChurch1

Special thanks to Andy Edson our Campus Pastor in Jarrell and a counselor for sending these resources and ideas related to this topic.

Adapted from:

https://www.shutterfly.com/ideas/how-to-start-a-gratitude-journal/

https://www.wanderlustworker.com/7-crucial-reasons-why-gratitude-can-change-your-life/

 

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