Sermon Notes • August 9

The Good Samaritan: Luke 10:30-37

Read Luke 10:30-37. Martin Luther King Jr wrote, “The first question which the priests and Levite asked was, ‘If I stop to help, what will happen to me?’ The Good Samaritan reversed the question. ‘If I don’t stop to help this man what will happen to him?’” 

The story of the Good Samaritan is one of the better-known parables that Jesus spoke. While we know it, there are always things to think about that should enrich our understanding and impact our behavior. 

This is a parable that should never have been given. It is an important one but the reason we have it is that a man asked a question he should not have asked. Jesus answered his wrong question with this parable.

The background is especially important to an understanding of this parable. A lawyer came to Jesus with a question. He was not a lawyer as we think of them today but a religious lawyer who helped people determine the letter of the law so they could live up to the standards set by the Scribes and Pharisees. Luke 10:25 records that he came to Jesus, “to test him.”  The religious leaders of Jesus day thought they had all the answers to religious issues, but Jesus constantly challenged them with a deeper commitment and a new approach to God. This religious lawyer approached Jesus to test Him, trip Him up or perhaps get Him to say something that was ground for a charge of blasphemy. 

The lawyer asked Jesus what a man had to do to inherit eternal life. Although he probably did not even fully understand what he was asking, he really did ask the right question. There is no question more important for a person to ask and get the right answer to than that one. Whenever someone honestly wanted to know that, Jesus gave a straightforward answer. Read John 3:1-17.  

The lawyer in Luke 10 was not interested in knowing the truth since he thought he already knew everything. He was testing Jesus, so Jesus threw the question back to him. The lawyer was well versed in the Old Testament, so he gave the standard rabbinical answer. Read Luke 10:27. The lawyer was half-right. A man can be saved by loving God completely and treating all his neighbors as himself. The problem is that no one can do that perfectly. The law is not wrong, it is just impossible for sinful man to fulfill it. At that point, the lawyer should have said “Yes, but what happens when you cannot do that?” That was, and always is, the real issue. If man was able to keep the whole law, he could save himself, but he cannot and for this reason Jesus paid the penalty of our sin. Read Ephesians 2:8-9.  

Rather than admit his own inability to live the law completely, that lawyer asked a question intended to switch the direction of the conversation. It is a decoy play we have all seen when we try to talk to individuals about God. It is extremely difficult for a person to admit to his sin, so he often seeks to change the subject. We don’t want to talk about sin in our day. The politician calls it an indiscretion; the psychiatrists call it a complex, even some pastors call it just a bad choice. God calls it sin and says that wages of sin is death, that is eternal separation from God. We all need to face up to the sin in our own lives, asking, as Nicodemus rightfully did, “What must I do to rid myself of sin?” Jesus answered Nicodemus that we must accept Jesus as our Savior. Read John 14:6. 

The lawyer in Jesus’ day was not willing to do that and so he asked the question found in Luke 10:29, “Who is my neighbor?”  I’m sure everyone knows that the Samaritans were hated by the Jews. I am not sure everyone is familiar with why that was true. 750 plus years before Jesus, the Babylonians conquered the Israelites and took most of the citizens into captivity, replacing them with people from other conquered lands. A few Jews were allowed to remain in Israel and in time they intermarried with the new inhabitants. When the Jews returned from captivity to reclaim Jerusalem and rebuild the wall, the descendents of those intermarriages offered to help but were refused permission because they were, in the eyes of pure Jews unclean, having a mixed heritage. They were forbidden to participate in the rebuilding of the city or to worship in its temple, so they set up their own temple in competition with the one in Jerusalem. Over the years that animosity grew. 

By the time of Jesus, the Jewish hatred of them had reached such a degree that a good Jew traveling north would walk miles around the area to totally avoid them. A good Jew never mentioned them, except as a curse. In fact, it is interesting that at the end of this parable when Jesus asked the lawyer who was a true neighbor, he simply said “the one who had mercy.” He would not even say the word Samaritan. 

The story itself was very vivid for all who heard it. The road from Jerusalem to Jericho was about 16 miles long and was an extremely dangerous one. It was largely wilderness with thieves living in the caves of that area. Unsuspecting travelers, especially if they were foolish enough to travel alone, were often robbed. As a parable there are lots of things we weren’t told because we don’t need to know it to understand the point. We don’t know who the robbed man was, or why he was on the road in what seems to have been alone. All we know is that he was robbed and beaten and left for dead. He was a man in need. The Samaritan, unlike Americans, never bothered to ask questions about who was to blame etc. The man needed help and that was all that mattered. It didn’t matter if he may had brought it on himself by his foolish ways. He needed help.

There are some other unknowns that may be significant. The parable says that two men who were religious leaders walked by the hurting man and did nothing. We ask, “Why not?” Of all people they were the ones we would hope would be the most sympathetic to the needs of a hurting individual. Jesus did not give any reason for such behavior. I suspect no reason was given as an excuse for their failure because any reason would be just that, an excuse. Jesus wanted us to know that no excuse was acceptable. Here was a man in need. Those who passed by were capable, in some way, of helping him because he was a neighbor. Two did not while one did and it is clear that the one who helped was right in God’s eye. End of story, even as the lawyer who was being told this understood so clearly. 

There is one more thing that we know but never hurts to be reminded of. The Samaritan not only stopped and did what he had to do at the moment, he then took him to a place where he could get more help, and then offered to cover the extra cost should there be any. Jesus could have ended the story with verse 34 and everyone would have known who the neighbor really was. So why was verse 35 added? I think it’s to remind us that really caring for our neighbors is going the extra mile, finishing the job, caring enough not only to give the best but to give more than is really required. 

After the lawyer declared that the Samaritan was the true neighbor Jesus said, “Now go and do likewise.” Parables are intended to teach us how to act as Christians in a way that is pleasing to God. Jesus was not saying if we are good to our neighbors, we will be saved but because we are saved, we should love our neighbor. Loving our neighbor is an expression of gratitude for God’s love to us.

This parable reminds us of who our neighbors really are. They are the anyone and everyone in any need that we can help with in any way. They are the people all around us who are hurting in any way. They are the people we find easy to love and they are the ones we might have every reason to dislike, even hate.

Our Kenyan friend, Dr. John Njoroge wrote an article in which he told the story of a man whose partially mummified body had been found propped up in a chair in front of his TV, a TV that was still on. They estimate that he had been dead for over a year. Apparently, the TV was his only companion, and being blind he could not even see it. As Dr. Njoroge notes, that raises the question of how anyone can vanish for over a year and not be missed by anyone. Where were his family and neighbors? Dr. Njoroge noted there here was a man “whose life can be summed up with one word, alienation.”

When reading the article, I asked, “Was there not one Christian or maybe even a Samaritan who could have checked on him?” The parable of the Good Samaritan should speak to us not only about those who have perhaps been beaten down by society but of those who have been ignored by society. The parable of the Good Samaritan reminds us that we need to love our neighbors also. Do we walk by, perhaps even being careful to cross to the other side, the lonely and discouraged individuals who live around us?  It is easy to ask ourselves what it will mean to us if we get involved with them but maybe Dr. King was right when he asked what it will mean to them if we don’t. As Christians we do fairly well at loving the Lord our God but, too often, we fall a little short on loving our neighbors. 

Bulletin • Sunday, August 2

MANBECK’S ZION EVANGELICAL

CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

                                    

Worshiping the Lord in Spirit and Truth

                                    

August 2, 2020

A Year in Ephesians

Norman Dixon, Pastor

610-589-2034

Email: Dixonnorm@comcast.net

Web Site:  www.manbecks.org

Organ Prelude to prepare your heart for worship

Welcome and opportunities to Worship and Serve

Greet one another in the Name of Jesus          

 

Call to Worship – Psalm 91:1-2               

* Opening Chorus #193                                                 God Is So Good

* Invocation 

* Opening Hymn #56                                            To God Be the Glory

First Scripture Luke 11:5-13

Praise Hymn #654                                        Change My Heart, O God  

*Prayer Hymn #718                                                              Day by Day 

**Pastoral Prayer

Offering of Tithes and Gifts to the Lord 

via offering plates in the back of the Sanctuary  

Special Music – Zach Kurtz

Scripture:  Mark 10:17-19 

Sermon:  “God is GOOD all the time!”

* Hymn of response #692                          God Will Take Care of You

*Benediction

* Recessional Response #235        Take the Name of Jesus (1st verse)  

                                    

Leave to Serve

  *Please Stand                                                **Please kneel (if able)

“We live in a generation where the people ignore God and then blame Him for the chaos that follows.”

ANNOUNCEMENTS

  

TODAY:

  • Pig Roast meeting                                                             10:00 A.M.

NEXT SUNDAY:

  • Building Fund Offering

LOOKING AHEAD:  

  • August 18 – Official Board Meeting                                 7:00 P.M.
  • August 29 – Newsletter                                                      7:00 P.M.
  • August 30 – Special Offering

Statistics:  July 26, 2020

                                  Attendance:  Worship Service – 33

                                                          Worship Service – $729.00

                                                Special Offering (CEF) – $234.00

                                                  

Pig Roast will be held on September 12.  Meetings will be held during the next few weeks.

At this date the Autumn Stroll is still going to be held.

PRAYER CONCERNS

  • Deb R. (niece needs hysterectomy) 
  • Katie (veterinarian was in an accident)
  • Jen (traveling mercies/beach)
  • Carol (Chris & family in VA/better trip coming home)
  • Jen (4H kids/no fair/will be doing on-line auction)
  • Betty (Granddaughter Carlee had knee surgery)
  • Carol (Treatment of Jenny)
  • Kathy Price (fractured left forearm and she’s healing)
  • Pray for our service men and women
  • Those battling cancer:

Pastor Lloyd Yeager (prostate cancer)  

Tim Ditzler – stage 4 pancreatic cancer            Bob Kramer

Mike       Sis Sagusky        Jake Wolfe           Rick Fidler

Cindy Segal (liver cancer)

Bill (Deb had radiation and they got the spot but found more)

 

  • Military:  Zack Frankfort, Navy     Keith Gillespie   

               Ashley Somers, Navy       Caleb Reiter

         Lois’s grandson, Kolby – Air Force

  • Nursing home/Assisted living residents

               Grace Kimmel   Nancy Wildsmith          

  Edgar Bennett 

PRAISE: 

  • Jen (they learned a few things when Liam came out of wisdom teeth surgery)

pastedGraphic.png

  • Decision on Week Day Church School
  • Joe Toy (Street ministry in Philadelphia)
  • Jamie and Anita Farr (Wycliffe in Florida)
  • Robert and Bettina Schaeffer (L.I.F.E. Ministries in New York City)
  • Wagner’s & Stoltzfus’s (Rift Valley Academy in Africa)

Sermon Notes • August 2

God is good! Follow Him.

Jesus has invited everyone to, “follow him.” We have been invited to follow Him in a commitment that results in being forgiven of our sins. Every believer has been invited to follow Him each day. The primary motivation for following God is the truth that because God is good. Following Him is by far the wisest thing we can do.

God is good. God is good all the time. God is good in every way. There is absolutely nothing about God that is not good. God is “gooder” than anything else in the universe. Read Mark 10:17-18. The word Jesus used for “good” is one that implies “good in essence” or “good in His very nature.” That means that God is always good in all His ways. Read James 1:17, Romans 12:2, Luke 11:13, and Romans 8:28.  God is absolutely, positively, all the time and in every way good. Being good is part of His essence. It is impossible for God to be or do anything that is not always and, in every way, good.

Most people, and certainly most Christians, believe, at least in theory, that God is good. It gets a little confusing when bad things happen to good people and we ask how a loving God could allow that, but the operative word is always allow and never the cause of anything that is not absolutely good. It also gets a little confusing when we assume that good always means pleasant. Good is not always pleasant but it is always good. We say in the physical world, no pain no gain and occasionally God says that is also true in the spiritual realm. Occasionally God says “I am going to have to discipline you and I know that no discipline seems good at the moment but I am too good to let you keep on that slippery path to self-hurt.” God is good, always and in every way He is good. If we believe that, why is it sometimes difficult to follow Him as He asks?

Some people, often younger but not always, when confronted by the claims of Jesus, say they are not ready to make a decision for Him because right now they want to live the exciting life and when they have had all of the good times they want, then they will give consideration to God. That is saying that this is the good life and the life a good God has laid out for them is not all that good compared to what they have now. God never said, “Come unto me all you who are enjoying life and I will make you miserable.” Jesus said, “Come unto me all you who think life is really good and I will show you what a, really good and abundant life is all about.”

Some people don’t want to make a commitment to God because they feel certain God is going to ask them to change a lifestyle or abandon a destructive sin they like. They aren’t sure the life that God has for them will be worth it. But His life is always good.

Too often when people think about following God, they think about the Ten Commandment’s call on us to live and think God gave those rules to ensure that mankind didn’t really enjoy life.

Actually, it is not God but Satan who was determined to make life miserable for mankind. Satan told Adam and Eve that God was holding out on them, that real life was to be found in exactly what God told them not to do. Adam and Eve believed the story when Satan first presented it to them, and millions have believed it ever since. God knows us, knows what we want, and knows how badly we sometimes want it. God is too good all the time and in every way to even give us permission to do that which He, as our designer, knows is not the best for us. Sin is wrong because it keeps us from having the absolute best that He desires to give to us. But we find it too easy to listen to the lies of Satan and question God’s goodness.

Unfortunately, rejecting the goodness of God is just approving of sin. It also comes into play when Jesus asks us to follow Him completely, to surrender ourselves totally to Him. Too many, when challenged to give God complete control of their life, seem to believe, “If I submit to Him God is going to make me talk to my neighbor about Jesus and you know I can’t do that.” Or “If I really submit totally to Him, He will ask me to give more in the offering but He knows that can’t happen, so why not just drop the subject.”

Too many Christians think that following a good God means that God will make the demand will be that will be most difficult if not impossible to comply with. That’s not the way it is, and while we all know that in our minds, it is often difficult to ignore the lies of Satan and just trust God to always ask us to do that which is good and to live in such a way as to allow Him to really shower His goodness upon us.

The truth applies to allowing God to lead and direct in every aspect of the life of our family, especially in the life of our children. Read Jeremiah 29:9. That was a statement to Israel, but it can equally be said of us and of our children. In our society we want to help our children find the profession they will do well in, so they succeed in ways that look good to us. That is totally wrong but at the heart of our prayers for our children and at the heart of whatever we do to help them choose a path in life should always be “find God’s will and follow that for in the end nothing is better for you than His will because He is always good in all He plans for them.”

Too seldom do we say to our kids things like, “Above all seek God’s will for your life.” Somehow, we have allowed that thinking to apply only to those who are going to be pastors or missionaries. The reality is that God has a perfect plan for everyone’s life and we need to regularly encourage our kids and grandkids to find that will because in the will of an always good God is the fullness of life He desires to give them and we want them to have.

Jesus invited us to “follow him.” That invitation was given personally by Jesus 13 times as recorded in the gospels. Actually, that invitation is not really an invitation but in the Greek is in the imperative or command form, so we are not really invited but commanded to follow Him. Some of those commands were very personal, as when Jesus called the disciples individually. Some of them were very general as He commands everyone who would know His blessing to follow Him. Some of the commands seem directed to those who have never considered Him personally and are really commands to follow Him for the salvation He offers. Some of them are commands to follow His example of commitment and to be willing to give up all self-ambition and be and do whatever He asks of us. Jesus wants us to follow Him. The immediate question is simply, “Why would we not want to follow Him?” If God is always and absolutely good, why would there be any hesitation in taking up our cross and following Him? The only reason I can imagine that we would not want to do all He asks of us is that, while we know in our heads that God is good and following Him would never be a mistake, we are still a little uncertain that all of His commandments are good and all of His expectations will be good. Perhaps we are just a little afraid to just trust Him for all good things. Satan is working overtime to get us to believe the lie he told to Adam and Eve. Satan wants us to think that maybe God is withholding from us.

Today, in the midst of so much uncertainty I just want to assure you that because God is good, we can follow His command to become His child. We can follow Him and His example and know with certainty that everything He tells us to do is really best. We can be certain that because He is good, if he tells us to stop doing something, He calls sin it is not because He wants to ruin our life but because He wants to give us fullness of life. Because God is always good, if He asks us to do something it is not because He wants to embarrass us or upset us but because He knows us better than we know ourselves. God is always good so when He looks upon us, He sees us in terms of both time and eternity and knows what is truly good for us.

God is good, all the time. God is good in every way, so why should we not follow Him completely as He has commanded?

Bulletin • Sunday July 26

MANBECK’S ZION EVANGELICAL

CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

                                    

Worshiping the Lord in Spirit and Truth

                                    

July 26, 2020

A Year in Ephesians

Norman Dixon, Pastor

610-589-2034

Email: Dixonnorm@comcast.net

Web Site:  www.manbecks.org

Organ Prelude to prepare your heart for worship

Welcome and opportunities to Worship and Serve

Greet one another in the Name of Jesus          

 

Call to Worship – Psalm 113:1-4               

* Opening Chorus #48                                             Mighty Is Our God

* Invocation 

* Opening Hymn #21         O for a Thousand Tongues (Marked stz)

First Scripture – Matthew 24:3-14

Praise Hymn #669                                                    Make Me a Servant  

*Prayer Hymn #746                         He Keeps Me Singing (stz. 1 & 5) 

**Pastoral Prayer

Offering of Tithes and Gifts to the Lord 

via offering plates in the back of the Sanctuary  

Special Music – Eve Kurtz

Scripture:  Luke 21:5-13 

Sermon:  “Signs of the return of Jesus”

* Hymn of response #759                                What If It Were Today?

*Benediction

* Recessional Response #235        Take the Name of Jesus (1st verse)  

                                    

Leave to Serve

  *Please Stand                                                **Please kneel (if able)

“If you plant weeds 

don’t expect to pick flowers.”

ANNOUNCEMENTS

  

TODAY:

  • Special Offering/Child Evangelism Fellowship

SATURDAY:

  • PGACOC Chicken BBQ/pick up at Church School
  • Newsletter                                                                            7:00 P.M.

NEXT SUNDAY:

  • Pig Roast meeting                                                             10:00 A.M.

LOOKING AHEAD:  

  • August 9 – Building Fund Offering
  • August 29 – Newsletter                                                      7:00 P.M.
  • August 30 – Special Offering

Statistics:  July 19, 2020

                                  Attendance:  Worship Service – 30

                                                          Worship Service – $ 

                                                  

Not too late for Chicken BBQ tickets.  See Cathy or Deb Lehr for tickets for Saturday, August 1st.  Donation is $8.00 for ½ chicken and baked potato.  Pick-up will be drive thru from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Church School building.

Pig Roast will be held on September 12.  Meetings will be held during the next few weeks.

At this date the Autumn Stroll is still going to be held.

PRAYER CONCERNS

  • Betty (Granddaughter Carlee had knee surgery)
  • Carol (Treatment of Jenny)
  • Kathy Price (fractured left forearm and she’s left handed)
  • Pray for our service men and women
  • Those of our church family who are traveling this summer
  • Those battling cancer:

Pastor Lloyd Yeager (prostate cancer)  

Tim Ditzler – stage 4 pancreatic cancer            Bob Kramer

Mike     Sis Sagusky      Jake Wolfe           Rick Fidler

Cindy Segal (liver cancer)

Bill (Deb had radiation and they got the spot but found more)

 

  • Military:  Zack Frankfort, Navy     Keith Gillespie   

               Ashley Somers, Navy       Caleb Reiter

         Lois’s grandson, Kolby – Air Force

  • Nursing home/Assisted living residents

               Grace Kimmel   Nancy Wildsmith          

  Edgar Bennett 

PRAISE: 

  • Hannah Wagner got engaged
  • Jonathan (painted barn roof/done safely)
  • Deb R. (Evan got approval for back surgery)

pastedGraphic.png

  • Decision on Week Day Church School
  • Joe Toy (Street ministry in Philadelphia)
  • Jamie and Anita Farr (Wycliffe in Florida)
  • Robert and Bettina Schaeffer (L.I.F.E. Ministries in New York City)
  • Wagner’s & Stoltzfus’s (Rift Valley Academy in Africa)

Sermon Notes • July 26

Return of Jesus

During this pandemic many Christians are thinking about the statement by Jesus found in Luke 21:10-12 that says one of the signs of His return would be pestilence,   Read Revelation 6:7-8 and Revelation 15:1. Are we in the last days before the return of Jesus?

The return of Jesus is an important biblical teaching. Jesus Himself promised to return. In the New Testament no teaching, apart from that which offers or explains salvation, is given the space given to the certainty of the return of Jesus. Bible scholars have noted that, on average, one in every 12 verses in the New Testament deals with His return in one way or another. God the Father declared in Acts 1:11 that Jesus would return. 

Jesus Christ, God’s only begotten Son, creator and sustainer of all things is going to one day return to earth and when He does every believer will rejoice and shout for joy as every believer will be instantly transformed into His likeness. What a day that will be! Read I Thessalonians 4:16-17 and Matthew 24:30. 

The fact of the return of the Lord is set forth so strongly and described so vividly in the Bible that one cannot miss it. History is moving toward the personal, physical, visible return in power and glory of Jesus Christ as Lord of Lords and King of Kings.

The question is never “Will He return?” but only, “When will He return?” That He will return is as secure as God who cannot lie and who will do all things exactly as He has said. But “When?” is the question. The church of the first century believed so strongly that His return would be immediate that some literally sold all they had, quit working and were sitting around waiting for that event. Paul wrote to them in Thessalonians and told them that it may be today or tomorrow or not for some time so get back to work and keep on working with all you have until He returns.

We are now 2000 years later. History records numerous times when the church believed it was in the last days and yet He has not returned. While many outside the church scorn and scoff saying, “See he will never return”, we who believe God’s Word know that He is coming, and that return could be very soon.

Why do many say the return of the Lord seems imminent or soon?  We cannot know the hour or day when the Lord will return, but Matthew 24 and Luke 21 record Jesus’ answer to disciples who wanted to know the time of His return. Jesus described in detail the signs that the church could look for before His return. He even stated that we were to be carefully looking for them.  

Read Luke 21:10-12. A lot has been written about those signs. There will be war and the rumors of such. There has been no period of history that has seen as many or as severe wars as our present generation. Earthquakes are in the news continually. Scientists tell us that there have been more earthquakes in the past century than at any known period of history before. There will be famine. We know that in Africa the locust has destroyed most of the food supply for the coming year with famine sure to follow.  Those involved in famine relief around the world write that in any given year as many as 200 million could die from starvation. 

The word “pestilence” is not easy to translate as it seems to have included a variety of issues, so it is often translated as “plagues.” In recent years Bible scholars have pointed to such plagues as Ebola and SARS. We have seen HIV infect an estimated 75 million and an estimated 33 million have died from it. The annual flu kills annually up to half a million worldwide and now we have Covid-19. The figures on that continue to climb every day.

Jesus went on to declare there will be persecution of Christians. We are all aware of the worldwide persecution against the church and it is not going to get any better as we move closer to the return of Jesus.

Put it all together and we see earthquakes, global unrest, famine, pestilence, and persecution in ways never before seen. It seems like God’s prophetic calendar is playing before our very eyes. Read what Jesus said in Mark 8:18. 

Read Matthew 24:37-38. Jesus said that the moral condition in the days just before His would be similar to those in the days of Noah when God said it was so terrible that He had to judge the whole earth. One cannot read the paper today or listen to the rantings of society regarding the freedom every individual should have to do whatever he wants and not picture the days of Noah.

Luke 21:24 gives another sign of the return of Jesus. Jesus said we were to look for the end of the times of the Gentiles. I know of no honest biblical scholar who does not take that to mean the end of Gentile rule over the nation of Israel in general and Jerusalem in particular. The rule of the Gentiles began in 586 B.C., in the days of Daniel of the Old Testament when the armies of Babylon swept through Israel and Jerusalem and foreigners began to control that nation. It passed from Babylon to Greece to Rome and in 70 A.D. under Roman rule the city of Jerusalem with the temple and everything that city stood for was destroyed. For nearly 2000 years the nation of Israel was not really a nation and Jerusalem was controlled by one country after another. At the turn of the last century a move was made by Zionists to get back the land that they believed was given to them by God and therefore belonged to them. In 1948 Israel again became a nation in the land of promise, a nation of 700,000 cast immediately into a war against an Arab world of 500 million. Few believed the new nation could survive but, in the years since, Israel has demonstrated its ability to be a nation returned home. Then in 1967, in what is called the Six Day War, Israel captured all of Jerusalem for the first time since 586 B.C. 

There is no way we can say for sure that this is the final end of the times of the Gentiles, but we cannot help but marvel at what is happening. 2000 years ago Jesus said “I am coming back” and when His disciples asked when, Jesus said “I cannot tell you the exact time but I will tell you this, there will be signs that all of you can easily see and the biggest one will be Jerusalem and when it all comes together, look up for my appearing is about to happen.” In Matthew 24 Jesus said that when these signs occur that generation would see His return. If 1967 was the fulfillment of Luke 21:24 then indeed we could very well be in the last 50-70 years of time to which I will add what John said in Revelation, “Come quickly, Lord Jesus.”

The real question is not so much what day will He return or even if He will return in our generation, which many of us expect, but what does the possible imminent return of the Lord mean to each of us? The first issue is, are we ready for His return should it be today? Matthew 24:40 tells us that when He returns one will be taken and one will be left behind. The return of Jesus will be great joy, blessing and happiness for all eternity for all who love Him and belong to Him by faith, but at the same time for those outside of Jesus that return means the opportunity of redemption is over and all that remains is judgment and eternal death.

The prospect of the return of our Lord is an encouragement and challenge to us as Christians. Read Luke 21:34

First, we are not to be “weighed down with carousing” The word “carousing” literally means to spend or use wastefully or extravagantly.” Jesus said that because there is a possibility that the Lord’s returning soon, we need to evaluate how we are using the resources we have.  Instead of building larger barns to keep our goods in we can and should use our resources to reach the lost before it is too late. Second, we are to avoid drunkenness, which is probably not a problem for us but a caution to a society that is more and more involved in drugs and other stimulants used to avoid reality. 

If we really believe that the Lord may come back soon, we should not be overcome with the cares of this world, or the anxieties of life. Things are not always easy in life, but we are on the winning side. While a view of the soon return of the Lord is not an excuse to reject reality or responsibility, it is a call to put it all in perspective, to see life as going somewhere even as history is going somewhere.

Think about how you would live if you knew for sure Jesus was coming back in two weeks.   Jesus said, “Be always on the watch.” That is a constant challenge for us as well as an encouragement to us as we live in these uncertain times.

Bulletin • Sunday, July 19

MANBECK’S ZION EVANGELICAL

CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

                                    

Worshiping the Lord in Spirit and Truth

                                    

July 19, 2020

A Year in Ephesians

Norman Dixon, Pastor

610-589-2034

Email: Dixonnorm@comcast.net

Web Site:  www.manbecks.org

Organ Prelude to prepare your heart for worship

Welcome and opportunities to Worship and Serve

Greet one another in the Name of Jesus          

 

Call to Worship – Psalm 62:1-2; 11-12               

* Opening Chorus #83             There’s Something About That Name

* Invocation 

* Opening Hymn #571                                Trust and Obey (stz. 1,3,4)

First Scripture – Matthew 5:1-10

Praise Hymn #669                                                    Make Me a Servant  

*Prayer Hymn #549                                     Higher Ground (stz. 1,2,3) 

**Pastoral Prayer

Offering of Tithes and Gifts to the Lord 

via offering plates in the back of the Sanctuary  

Special Music – Judy Lengle

Scripture:  Hebrews 5:11-14 

Sermon:  “How to tell if someone is a real Christian”

* Hymn of response #429                 They’ll know We Are Christians

*Benediction

* Recessional Response #235        Take the Name of Jesus (1st verse)  

                                    

Leave to Serve

  *Please Stand                                                **Please kneel (if able)

“God always answers knee-mail.”

ANNOUNCEMENTS

  

NEXT SUNDAY:

  • Special Offering/Child Evangelism Fellowship

LOOKING AHEAD:  

  • July 25 – Newsletter                                                           7:00 P.M.
  • August 9 – Building Fund Offering
  • August 29 – Newsletter                                                      7:00 P.M.
  • August 30 – Special Offering

Statistics:  July 12, 2020

                                  Attendance:  Worship Service – 27

                                                          Worship Service – $1,117.00 

                                                                Building Fund – $470.00

                                                  

See Cathy or Deb Lehr for Chicken BBQ tickets for Saturday, August 1st.  Donation is $8.00 for ½ chicken and baked potato.  Pick-up will be drive thru from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Pig Roast will be held on September 12.  Meetings will be held during the next few weeks.

At this date the Autumn Stroll is still going to be held.

PRAYER CONCERNS

  • Pray for our service men and women
  • Those of our church family who are traveling this summer
  • Those battling cancer:

Pastor Lloyd Yeager (prostate cancer)  

Tim Ditzler – stage 4 pancreatic cancer            Bob Kramer

Mike  S   is Sagusky     Jake Wolfe           Rick Fidler

Cindy Segal (liver cancer)

 

  • Military:  Zack Frankfort, Navy     Keith Gillespie   

               Ashley Somers, Navy       Caleb Reiter

         Lois’s grandson, Kolby – Air Force

  • Nursing home/Assisted living residents

               Grace Kimmel   Nancy Wildsmith          

  Edgar Bennett 

PRAISE: 

  • Donna (had a safe trip to work after the pile up on 81)
  • Laure (husband got his blood pressure under control)

pastedGraphic.png

  • Decision on Week Day Church School
  • Joe Toy (Street ministry in Philadelphia)
  • Jamie and Anita Farr (Wycliffe in Florida)
  • Robert and Bettina Schaeffer (L.I.F.E. Ministries in New York City)
  • Wagner’s & Stoltzfus’s (Rift Valley Academy in Africa)

Sermon Notes • July 19

Marks of a Christian

What are the characteristics of committed Christian? A genuine Christian has made a personal commitment to Jesus as Savior and, therefore, has the Holy Spirit living within. Read Romans 8:16, and I John 3:24. Since we cannot see the Holy Spirit in an individual the only way to test the genuineness of one’s claim to be a Christian is to observe in one’s life those characteristics the Bible says a growing Christian should display in everyday living. Various passages give a description of the Christian life and collectively they give every Christian a guide to how one should live.

In various teachings Jesus gave us four characteristics of a disciple or Christian. They are as follows:

  1. Absolute Surrender. Read Luke 14:27 and 33.
  2. Absolute Fruitfulness. Read John 15:8. In the context of the New Testament that fruit implies growing in the fruit of the Spirit. Read Galatians 5:22-23. 
  3. Absolute Love. Read John 13:35.
  4. Absolute Obedience. Read John 8:31.

Another description given to us is found in the passage we call the beatitudes that introduce Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount. Found in Matthew 5:1-10 we see a Christian described there as one who is “poor in spirit,” one who is “meek,” one who “hungers and thirsts for righteousness,” one who is “merciful,” one who is “pure in heart,” one who is a “peacemaker,” and one who is willing to be “persecuted because of righteousness.” That is a list of characteristics of someone God will richly bless that we should review often and reevaluate our lives by them. 

Paul gave various descriptions of what the Christian life should look like. Read I Thessalonians 5:16-18. While given in the form of a command, Paul pictures a Christian as one who is characterized by joy, praying and being thankful.

Another description of a Christian is found in Hebrews 5:12-14. Read those verses. A characteristic of a Christian that Paul wrote about is that he is a growing/maturing Christian. Christians are growing spiritually as they grow in their knowledge of God through a growing knowledge of His Word. 

In the Bible, as in Hebrews 5:12-14, the term milk implies a basic food that does not require any chewing. A baby drinks, and his body does the rest. But as any parent knows, it is not long before we must begin feeding a baby more solid food. In time the body needs a variety of foods that are essential to health and growth. In the Bible milk is symbolic of basic doctrines that are essential in making a decision for Jesus while meat depicts food that is more complete and leads to a deeper spiritual life. A sign that one is a sincere Christian is his or her desire to grow spiritually and therefore willing to chew on solid foods.

Read II Timothy 3:16 to see the areas we will grow in if we study the Bible. A study of Scripture enables a Christian to grow in an understanding of truth (doctrine). Studying Scripture enables us to understand how to live or how to grow in holiness (reproof and correction). And studying Scripture enables a Christian to know what pleases God (training in righteousness).

God gave the Bible as a self-revelation of Himself and what He expects from Christians. He has also given us the Holy Spirit and among the tasks of the Holy Spirit we have Him helping us to understand God’s Word when we read and study it. He also helps us recall it when we need to be reminded of a truth to hold onto, a promise to claim, and a command to be obeyed.

God’s Word declares some areas in which we should be growing and that is growth possible only as we increase our knowledge of God’s Word. The Bible encourages us to grow in our faith. Jesus spoke several times, according to Matthew’s record of Jesus’ life, of those who were “of little faith.” In Luke 17:5 we read that the disciples asked Jesus to, “increase our faith.” Read Romans 10:17. Most Christians want a deeper and more consistent faith life and the primary way that will happen is through a deeper understanding of God’s Word. We must spend more time in the Bible. 

God’s Word declares Christians should be growing in holiness, that is in living as God would have them live. We cannot live as God wants us to unless we know what His expectation is. We learn that as we study God’s Word. Read I Thessalonians 4:1-2.  Paul urged the Thessalonians Christians to follow more and more closely what is today the equilivent to what God has given us in His whole Word. 

We are to be growing our faith, growing in holiness, and growing in our love for one another. Read I Thessalonians 4:10 and Philippians 1:9. The New Testament tells us various times that we are to love one another and grow in our love. The more of God’s Word we know and of God’s love for us, the more we will want to love the brethren. 

The New Testament describes Christian growth as a process that takes time but is the responsibility of every believer to be committed to it. It is a lifelong process but an important one if we are going to become all God redeemed us for. The process will not be completed until we are in God’s presence but is a process we should take seriously here and now.

Bulletin for Sunday, July 12

Sunday July 12, 2020

Norman Dixon, Pastor

610-589-2034

Email: Dixonnorm@comcast.net

Web Site: www.manbecks.org

Organ Prelude to prepare your heart for worship

Welcome: Opportunities to Worship and Serve

Call to Worship Psalm 95:1-3

*Opening Chorus # 209 This Is the Day

*Invocation 

*Hymn # 572 Blessed Assurance (All 3 stanzas)

First Scripture Psalm 96:1-6

*Prayer Hymn # 636 I Must Tell Jesus (Stanzas 1, 2)

**Pastoral Prayer

Special Music Deb Reiter

Scripture: Psalm 96:7-13

Sermon: Sing to the Lord

*Hymn: # 406 Wonderful Words of Life (Stanzas 1, 2)

*Benediction

*Recessional Response #235 Take the Name of Jesus (1st)

Leave to Serve

*Please Stand **Please Kneel if able

Today: Building Fund Sunday

This Week: CEF Ministries. Would have been camp at Manbeck’s

PRAYER CONCERNS

  • Bob Zimmerman Family. He went to be with the Lord.
  • Larue (Brother tore his meniscus/pray quick recovery)
  • Betsy (Nephew lost everything in a fire)
  • Willis (daughter Morgan, transition from HI to GA/doing better)
  • Betsy (unspoken request)
  • Jon (John Miller/heart issues and tumor removed from his brain)
  • Marion (her grandson)
  • American public/opioid epidemic
  • Those battling cancer:

Pastor Lloyd Yeager

Tim Ditzler – stage 4 pancreatic cancer

Mike   Sis Sagusky     Jake Wolfe           Rick Fidler

Cindy Segal (liver cancer) 

Military:  Zack Frankfort, Navy     Keith Gillespie   

               Ashley Somers, Navy      

         Lois’s grandson, Kolby – Air Force

  • Nursing home/Assisted living residents

               Grace Kimmel   Nancy Wildsmith          

  Edgar Bennett 

PRAISE: 

Good rains.\Parking Lot paved 

pastedGraphic.png

  • Joe Toy (Street ministry in Philadelphia)
  • Jamie and Anita Farr (Wycliffe in Florida)
  • Robert and Bettina Schaeffer (L.I.F.E. Ministries in New York City)
  • Wagner’s & Stoltzfus’s (Rift Valley Academy in Africa)

Sermon Notes • July 12

 Psalm 96

Psalms 96-99, along with Psalms 47 and 93, are classified as Psalms of enthronement because they depict God as He reigns supreme in power and majesty from His throne on high. It is also classified as a praise Psalm. The praise Psalms follow a similar pattern. They begin with a call to worship or praise God, often in song. Then they detail the reasons for that praise, reasons that always center on the character and activity of God. They conclude with a renewed call to continue the praise to God.

Psalm 96 is a Messianic Psalm because it presents the message of salvation that Jesus will offer to the whole world. It’s a missionary Psalm because it talks of the whole earth responding to God and worshipping Him. It looks ahead to the millennium as it pictures a coming world order or government ruled over by God Himself. This Psalm covers it all. It reminds us of how much we have that we should be thankful for. It instructs us to share that joy with others and then tells us we can not only sing a new song of redemption but a new song of hope as we look forward to the return of the Lord.

We are told three times in the first 2 verses to Sing to the Lord. The command to sing is followed by three additional commands, the commands to praise, to proclaim and to declare.  We are also commanded in verses 7-9 to ascribe or attribute to God glory as well as bring an offering to Him. Verse 9 repeats the command to worship and fear Him in a healthy way. Verse 10 commands us to declare to the nations that God reigns and is coming to judge and to establish a righteous kingdom. 

The Psalm begins with a command to sing a new song. When the Bible speaks of a new song it is a song that can only be sung by God’s people as they discover in fresh ways truths about God. Read Revelation 5:9 and14:3. The new life God provides us with truly gives us a new song. 

The idea of a “new song” has a dual dimension to those songs. We sing a new song whenever we reflect on so great a salvation that God has provided for us. That story is an encouragement and comfort to us. But there is another dimension to our new song. There ought to always be a newness to our song and in our witness because there should always be a newness in our walk with Him. Read Lamentations 3:22-23. Because His compassion is new every day, so too should an element of our song of praise be new every day.

Verse 2 tells us to “proclaim” His salvation from day to day. The word “proclaim” is literally “preach” or “herald” and implies a sharing of the message of salvation. What is significant is the call to do this literally daily. 

According to verse 3, our new song is to, “Declare his glory among the nations.” That is another way of declaring the universal nature of the salvation message. While the church holds to the universality of the gospel, there are still hundreds of groups of people that are considered un-reached with millions of people still needing to hear the gospel for the first time. The task of missions is not over.

Verse 3 tells us that we are to declare His “marvelous deeds among all peoples.” We are to give a testimony of God’s love and provision. We are to tell others what God has done for us. We must also remember His daily provision for us.  Tell of the peace He gives in times of need. Tell of the quiet voice of encouragement He gives when things get tough. Tell of how He displays His love for us and of the marvelous care and provisions He provides for us. They all become even more marvelous when we remember that they are not deserved. 

Verses 4-6 spell out why He is worthy of our praise. God is great and worthy of being greatly praised because He is above all the other supposed gods who are only idols. The Hebrew word for “idol” is a fascinating one. It literally translates as “a no thing.” That more than adequately describes anything we worship instead of the true and living God. Obviously, the true God is above any no-god. Those verses then contrast the God of Israel with the heathen gods and idols and declare we are both able and compelled to praise God because of His greatness. One does not need to be ashamed of God. Idols are made by men, according to verse 5, while our God created everything including the heavens. Psalm 19:1 tells us that those “heavens declare the glory of God.

James Montgomery Boice, in his commentary on this passage, wrote, “If you are not worshipping God of the Bible exclusively, as God says you must do, you are not worshipping God. You are not a Christian.” P. 785

Note that in verse 4 David personified the character of God. It pictures His character or splendor, majesty, strength, and glory as if they were individuals. In ancient times Kings had their thrones and before them stood various individuals who were responsible to do their bidding. Those individuals stood ready to obey any directive and to accomplish the will of the king. The Psalm depicts God on His throne with His essence or nature ready and able to accomplish His will. Collectively those attributes picture a God worthy of praise because of who He is intrinsically. God’s very essence is splendor and majesty, worthy of our awe and worship. He is the Almighty One who can do what He desires as opposed to idols that can do nothing because they are, literally, a “no-thing”. 

Verses 7-8 include the trilogy of “ascribe” that parallels the trilogy of “sing” in the first three verses. These verses are also almost a copy of the opening verses of Psalm 29. To “ascribe” is literally to “give” to God what is, according to verse 8, the worship He deserves. He is worthy of our worship because of who He is and what He has done. 

A part of our worship, according to verse 8, is to bring an offering to Him. In the Old Testament, of course, those offerings of praise and thanksgiving or the acknowledgement of one’s sins, took place in the form of animal sacrifices brought to the temple. They were the way the Israelites said they were sorry for their sins or thankful for God’s provision. When we come to the New Testament and the church we no longer need to go to the temple, in fact there is no temple, but the sacrifices are still required. Paul told us how we are to bring a sacrifice to God. Read Romans 12:1. 

Verse 9 is an important verse on worship. It reminds us that we are to come to God in worship truly recognizing the awesome nature of God. The NIV writes that we are to come trembling while some other translations say we are to come in fear. We come before God in worship not with a scared fear but with a sense of awe and reverence. There is always a delicate balance in our worship between recognizing God as being our Father in heaven and remembering that He is eternal, almighty, truly holy One. Recognizing the splendor of His holiness is the starting point of approaching Him with a sense of awe.

Verses 10-13 deal with the worship that belongs to Him because He is coming again to judge sin and correct the curse of sin. The Psalmists presented what at first seems to be a contradiction when he called on us to rejoice over the coming judgment. That apparent contradiction is not explained until we discover in the New Testament that when Jesus returns Satan and sin will be righteously judged. The Apostle Paul tells us that a major part of the judgment on sin will be the restoration of God’s creation to what it was before man’s sin. That includes God’s gracious care for believers. including the abiding with Him forever, but it is more than that. Read Romans 8:20-22. 

This Psalm presents two major challenges. First, it challenges us to be more serious and deliberate in our worship. We are to be that way because of who God is and what He has done for us. We are to worship Him not only for what He did for us on the Cross, but for the new displays of His love and care that we see every day.

Second, we must be willing to openly share the gospel. We need to stand with the Psalmist and declare the gospel everywhere. We should not be hesitant to stand up and “sing,” that is tell others, what God has done for us. We do that as we verbally share our faith and as we support missions.

Bulletin for Church Service • June 5

Sunday July 5, 2020

Norman Dixon, Pastor

610-589-2034

Email: Dixonnorm@comcast.net

Web Site: www.manbecks.org

Organ Prelude to prepare your heart for worship

Welcome: Opportunities to Worship and Serve

Call to Worship Psalm 117

*Opening Chorus # 83 There’s Something About That Name

*Invocation 

*Hymn # 356 Redeemed (stanzas 1, 2 and 3)

First Scripture John 3:16-21

*Prayer Hymn # 635 In the Garden (1 and 2)

**Pastoral Prayer

Scripture: Romans 8:1-3

Sermon: Our Shepherd

*Hymn: # 807 My Country, Tis of Thee  (Stanzas 1 and 4)

*Benediction

*Recessional Response #235 Take the Name of Jesus (1st)

Leave to Serve

*Please Stand **Please Kneel if able