Trust in the Lord



Of God’s Spirit

 
 
 
 
Pastor David Rawley, Otterbein United Brethren in Christ Church
 
Each year at Christmas I hear some new objection to the Christmas “celebration”  that is based on an old argument.  Some of our cultural trappings have been folded into the Christian celebration of the birth of Jesus.  Therefore, we should reject it and downplay our whole festivity and idea of Christmas within the Christian community.  About the only “Christian” symbol is the star of Bethlehem.  Almost everything else is suspect and has its roots in a dim, dark idolatrous past.  The tree.  The lights. The candy cane.  The romanticizing of Saint Nicholas.  And the DAY.   Especially the Day, December 25.  Everyone knows that the pagans of the Middle Ages celebrated the feast of Saturnalia and the winter solstice and all the revelry and non Christian activity that was associated with the turn of the season toward spring.  Therefore, this argument goes, the churches and Christian community of today have simply put a Christian garment over a pagan corpse and we should not celebrate such nonsense.  We have simply “Christianized” idolatry and this is wrong.  We should be happy about the birth of Jesus, but we should not accommodate or adapt any of these features or symbols into the Christian community. Read more…


One Year And Daily Walk


Daily Bible reading has always been a deep help for spiritual growth. The year may come and go, but you can start a daily Bible
 
reading plan any day of the year!    Take a walk. Change your wold.


The Cross – No Accident

Pastor David Rawley, Otterbein United Brethren in Christ Church

April 12, 2017
The cross was not an accident of history.  Nor was God’s purpose for mankind changed by what Jesus did at the cross.  “God fulfilled what he had foretold through all the prophets, saying that his Christ would suffer.”  (Acts 3:18)  “These men did what God’s power and will had decided beforehand should happen.”  (Acts 4:28)  The cross actually

was

God’s plan to restore mankind to his purpose.

However, this does not lessen the crime of those who rejected and crucified Jesus.  Acts 2:23 refers to those who crucified him as “wicked men.”  So God incorporated the actions of those who opposed him into his own plan and purpose.  He used their evil as he made a way for evil to be overcome.  A resurrection presupposes death.  Jesus could have died in a different way, perhaps an accident or sickness.  But it was not the residual effects of the “fall” (accident, entropy, disease) that Jesus died for.  It was mankind.  So he allowed the hatred of mankind to sign his death sentence.  The reverse of the curse will happen someday, at the future resurrection.  But the forgiveness of sin happened at Calvary and was announced back there at the first resurrection.

I was asked to cut out a wooden moose as a wall decoration.  However, the board made available to me (pine) had a flaw.  A knot.  I was frustrated and almost refused the project.  Than… an idea!  Since I could not hide or ignore the knot, I would use it to my benefit.  I sketched the head around it and that knot became the eye.  Wow!  That stupid knot became the centerpiece and looked very realistic.  I told the moose, “Quit staring at me!”   Somehow, I had incorporated the flaw into the finished product, and it looked great!  That very blemish had become my blessing.

And this is what the Lord did as he turned the hostility and wretchedness of mankind into the greatest blessing and hope ever offered to mankind.  He offers this, also, to each of our individual lives.  Our flaws… forgiven and transformed… covered and converted by his death and resurrection.

The resurrection of Christ is history, but it is still making history… in our lives!