Our One Defense

“The Jews who had come down from Jerusalem stood around him, bringing many and serious charges against him that they could not prove. Paul argued in his defense…” Acts 25:7-8a

You might know what it feels like to defend yourself against an accusation. Maybe you said something unkind, or behaved unethically or told a half truth, and you were found out. Or perhaps you were unfairly accused of something another did. Either way, our bodies have a physiological response to these moments; sweaty palms, a racing heart, nausea, and spiraling thoughts.

One day, we will face death, and after death, the judgement.

Guilty, we will stand before the God who knows all things, even our motives, and our adversary will be there- the accuser of the brethren- who accuses us day and night before the Lord. The fear and trepidation we feel defending ourselves on earth will be nothing in comparison to what we experience on that day.

We will have no argument, no defense, no hope, save One.

Jesus took the punishment we deserved, and through Him we are declared forgiven and righteous. His blood silences our accuser.

“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. For the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death.” (Romans 8:1-2)

No condemnation.

Paul stood before Festus the Governor, innocent of the charges brought against him. Ultimately, he appealed to go before Caesar in hope of a fair trial.

Our hope? It’s not in a fair trial, but in the grace and mercy of our God, in Christ Jesus. He is our Defender and Justifier, today and always.

Freedom Through Faith in Christ Jesus

“Can we talk about something serious?”

“What do you want to talk about?” 

“I’d love to talk about faith in Christ Jesus,”

“Ok, yeah.  That sounds cool.”

“To do that, we’ll have to talk about our idolatry too.”

“Oh!  On second thought, I’m kind of busy right now.  Maybe later.”

Discussing personal idolatry is not usually a popular topic for conversations.  In our text this week, we see personal idolatry holding many of the characters back from the truth about Paul, themselves and faith in Christ Jesus.  What might be holding you back from living in truth today or from redeeming faith in Jesus? 

The Bible is clear that humans love to exchange the truth of God for a lie so we can live anyway we want.  When that happens, we are sinning against God.  Sin and idolatry are one in the same.  It has often been quoted that sin will take you farther then you want to go, keep you longer than you want to stay and cost you more than you want to pay.  For such a serious matter, why is it so hard to talk about?  I think it’s because in the dysfunctional cycle of loving our idols we have trouble discerning the truth from the lies and our sin enslaves our thinking.

But thanks be to God, He grants us faith in Christ that will set us free to live in the truth!  Living in the truth means admitting our idolatry early and often.  It means claiming our right standing with God is found through Christ alone.  It means trusting in the judgment of Him who sent His own Son as the once for all payment for sin.  It means living by His Word and Spirit as He leads us on His way for us.  In this gospel cycle, we are compelled to love Him because He first loves us.  In Christ, we are free to live and love as we were intended by our Creator!

So while we read through the text this week may we see there is spiritual freedom available through Jesus that most deeply effects our physical existence.  Let us confess our idols each moment so our minds will be re-directed to the Author and Perfector of our Faith!  I mean why would anyone want to hear us talk about idolatry with them when we aren’t very good at facing our own issues with it.  May we be a freed people who are free indeed and can’t help but share the news of our Messiah so that other captives may also live free!  

Grateful and hopeful in Christ, 

Jon

God at Work

I couldn’t help but think that our study in Acts 23:12-25 reads like a screenplay for a riveting historical drama:  murder plots, vows, appearance of long lost relatives, unlikely sources assisting the protagonist, military personnel soldering through the night to transport a prisoner.   I think we can agree that God is the ultimate Director, Producer, Editor of our lives, and this story in Acts is a beautiful display of His work in one man’s life.  Nowhere in our text this week does it refer to God doing a miracle, it doesn’t say God did this or God did that.  But, God is at work in this story, my story and your story. 

Twenty years ago I was flying alone from Sacramento back to St. Louis when we hit thunderstorms unlike anything I had experienced on a plane.  The ride was bumpier than any roller coaster at Six Flags and the lady behind me was calling out, “Whoa, whoa!!” as if she was riding a bucking bronco at the rodeo.  I was pretty close to tears, sweating profusely and my heart was pumping like I’d been running a marathon when a man came walking down the aisle, headed to what I assume was the restroom.  The flight attendant yelled at him to please sit down and stay buckled, so he plopped down in the row across from me (the plane was not very full, empty seats in every row).  For the next two hours this man talked to me, made me laugh and helped me get through the scariest plane ride I’ve ever had.        

My plane story is nowhere as interesting as what’s happening to Paul, it’s not even my best example of things God has done in my life or my best plane story, but that’s the point.  It’s not just health, safety, family, friends:  it’s everything!  Proverbs 16:33 tells us, “The lot is cast into the lap, but its every decision is from the Lord.” God is at work in the details of our lives every hour, every minute, every second of the day using natural circumstances to accomplish His will.  For Paul, he brought forth a nephew we never heard of, a guard who was willing to do as Paul instructed and a commander who was willing to listen to the young nephew, and it goes on and on.  Where can you see God at work in your story today?

-Brenda Wooff

Taming the Tongue

“Rejoice in the Lord always, I will say it again: Rejoice!” This simple message from Philippians 4 is a command that can be hard to follow at times. I often succumb to the snowball effect of a negative thought. Regrettably, I admit these moments often happen at the beginning of a prayer, when I raise up to the Lord a concern and instead of leaving my worries with Jesus, I end up, in the middle of the prayer, dwelling on the worry that I was bringing to Him - the opposite of rejoicing.  Thankfully our Lord knows our hearts and can see through our human weakness.

And while negative thoughts are certainly problematic, negative talk also leads us and others down destructive paths. In our current culture, it can feel like there is only negative talk. While the book of Acts shows us our sins today were often prevalent back then, there is no doubt the ease to which we can shine a light or spread darkness is greater today. In our scripture reading this week, Paul provides a simple message when he says “for it is written: ‘Do not speak evil about the ruler of your people’.” Let’s simplify it further:  Do not speak evil.

James 3:5 states “Likewise the tongue is a small part of the body, but it makes great boasts. Consider what a great forest is set on fire by a small spark.” Let us go out into the word by shining our light, being constructive, and speaking kindly to others. Those positive actions will also reduce our negative thoughts.

PS:  Eugene Cho has a newer book out titled, Thou Shalt Not Be a Jerk: A Christian's Guide to Engaging Politics. It’s an encouraging read about how we can be civil and respectful while still engaging in the political process.

-Alex Pfister

The Human Touch

“My companions led me by the hand…”

Acts 22:10

The riots sparked by Paul’s enemies at the end of Acts 21 occurred in AD 57. In Acts 22:1-29, after order was restored by Roman troops and the crowd silenced to hear Paul, he witnessed his encounter with Jesus Christ, his healing and salvation, and his sole purpose for living.

Interestingly, Paul chose a non-confrontational approach; he told his story instead. A testimony about his personal experience with Jesus Christ and the humane treatment he received from others during his conversion and salvation. Paul used his life’s stories as a witness to a tense crowd where Paul shared the horror of his past and how devastating sin is, God’s divine invasion into his present, and his future commanded by God to share his life and the life of Christ with all people.[1]

Personal stories.

The human touch.

Man, in this weary time of masked faces and cautious encounters, we need to hold onto our once firm grasp of sharing our lives and our stories (the good and the bad) at the personal level — the human touch. And avoid slouching forward with fearful perspectives and extended isolation away from friends, family, and church community.

In the movie Australia, Hugh Jackman is a rugged cowboy from the Outback of Australia. Nicole Kidman is a widow living on an Outback ranch. She looks at Jackman and his backwoods, filthy appearance with contempt. Jackman is aware of it and says, “Most people like their land, luggage, other people. All that makes them feel secure but in the end all that can be taken away. In the end, the only thing we own is our story; I’m just trying to live a good one.”

What stories do you own and that you have lived that can be shared as a witness for your faith, Jesus Christ, and what He has done in your life? Stories advance our human touch and bridge-building to heal the wounds and weariness of this evil pandemic.

When Walt Disney started working on full-length animation, he invented storyboarding, which is now used extensively in films. It was groundbreaking. It is where the story is sketched before filming begins. If you portrayed your life on storyboards, I bet the etchings depict a kaleidoscope of the human experiences of highs and lows, the good and the bad, the smooth and the difficult. And, as Paul did in Acts 22, you can use your storyboards as opportunities to testify from your heart with the Holy Spirit’s help. Stories from the heart are desperately needed where the human touch fades and hearts harden as this pandemic and its impact lingers on.

Fast forward three years, Paul is imprisoned in Rome writing to the Christians in Ephesus. The city of Ephesus was awash in paganism and negative lifestyles influenced by worldly drifters that traveled its many Roman trade routes intersecting into the city. I can’t help but think Paul is reflecting on his encounters in such cultures and the events at the Temple in Acts 22 when he writes in Ephesians 5:14-17: “Awake, you who sleep / Arise from the dead / And Christ will give you light… So be careful how you live… Take full advantage of every day as you spend your life for His purposes.” [blended translations]

Paul didn’t care whether his testimony crashed and burned. It didn’t deter him from spreading the Good News of Jesus Christ and His salvation through his testimony. It didn’t stop him from sharing his personal stories. It didn’t stop him from offering a human touch during difficult and divisive times.

We, too, need to Arise and Awake and take full advantage of every day God has given us and follow Ananias’ encouragement for Paul to get baptized [v.16], which Paul shared with the crowd: “And now why are you waiting? Arise…”

Please share your personal stories as a witness for Jesus Christ. He is the light of hope and salvation for all people.  Extend a human touch.

-Dan Nickel

[1]Eugene Peterson, The Message Devotional Bible [NavPress, Colorado Springs, 2018], 1290.

Stray Rescue for Humans

Bonds and afflictions awaited me… I needed a rescue story.

I follow many stray animal rescue sites. As an animal lover, a dog person, I look out for lost dog posts and find hope in reading the rescue stories of abandoned animals. I must confess that every time I read an animal rescue story I think, why can't we love humans the way we love animals? Teams of people responding to a report of an abandoned animal. Sometimes the animal is hard to catch, biting, barking, or evading their rescuers. Yet the rescuers never give up, often joining in large groups, going out in extreme weather conditions to save the one in need. Even though the animal runs, and might get away, the rescuers go back repeatedly with all efforts to save the animal. Then once rescued, the animal is rushed to a place of safety to get food, medical care, bathed, groomed, and loved on. Never having to pay their rescuers back, never having to sign a document swearing to be a good animal. The animal is loved unconditionally by their rescuers without judgement towards their condition. The animal’s story is shared with a picture of them in their condition for all to see. Money is donated, encouraging words are written. Celebrating the rescue with follow up pictures shared with a progress report for all to see the miraculous change. Many volunteer to house the animal temporarily until they can find a forever home.

When I read one of these rescue stories I think, why can't we love humans this way? Why do we think humans can rescue themselves? Why do we blame the human for being in the streets? When that human was most likely mistreated, cast aside, abused, and left alone by those who claimed to love them. When I read these animal rescue stories, I see my own rescue story. I have seen my own bonds and afflictions casting me out, leaving me broken and alone.

In Acts 21: 27-37, crowds of people surround Paul not to rescue him but to capture and kill him. Paul had angered the Jews by speaking out to all men everywhere about the way Jesus taught the Church of Acts to love one another. Paul had been seen with an Ephesian named Trophimus - a Greek! They claimed Paul brought the Greek into the Temple thus defiling the Temple and breaking Jewish Law. It is important to state that no one saw Trophimus in the Temple, the Jews just assumed that if Trophimus was walking with Paul in the city, then he could have been in the Temple. The crowd was so angry that it took 1,000 soldiers showing up with their commander for the crowd to stop beating Paul. Interesting rescue story. Yes, at this moment Paul was still bound and had to be carried away by soldiers because the mob was so great, but he was no longer being beaten.

Paul knew bounds and afflictions awaited him, but Paul also knew Jesus awaited him, Jesus prays for him, Jesus intercedes for him and Jesus is the resurrected Son of God. Paul only hoped others could know that love, too. There are very few who rally to rescue humans the way animals are rescued. There is one who never gives up on His lost sheep. Our good shepherd, Jesus. He loves us, brings rescue, food, healing, and washes us clean. He cradles us in our dying moments. He brings us home and deals out judgement to those who inflict pain on His people. Paul wrote of his rescue story in 2 Timothy chapter 4: 17-18. “But the Lord stood with me and strengthened me, so that through me the proclamation might be fully accomplished, and that all the Gentiles might hear; and I was rescued out of the lion’s mouth. The Lord will rescue me from every evil deed and will bring me safely to His heavenly kingdom; to Him be the glory forever and ever. Amen.”

I want to love humans like that, search until I find them, bring them to safety, food and healing. I want to celebrate their rescue story. Love them the way Jesus loves them. Love them even more than we love our animals.

-Nikki Fiedler

Inspired, But Not Inspiring

“All of scripture is inspired, but not all of it is equally as inspiring.”- Alistair Begg

“Will we ever get through Acts,” I thought to myself as I realized I was scheduled to write two weeks in a row. When I read the passage, I felt Alistair’s words deep in my soul! Goodness. What in the world will I say?

I should know by now that every time I need to write, the Lord is going to give me something to say, and I don’t think it’s for my sake. It’s for the sake of all of you who read it.

In the Monday morning women’s Bible study earlier this week, the teacher said “we are not orphans or the fatherless digging for food from the Word. Rather we are God’s beloved children and when we read the Bible, we can expect the Lord will feed us from the Word. He has prepared the meal for us.”

Cue the conviction from the Holy Spirit! I showed up in the middle of Acts 21 begging my Father to give me something- ANYTHING- to write about. I acted like I was digging through the trash looking for a scrap, rather than feasting from the word of God.

For the past few days, I’ve dug into Acts 21 as often as possible. And what the Lord has shown me through this passage has been a treasure. I wrote a whole lot! But then I decided not to share it.

On Sunday Pastor Steven is going to preach from Acts 21:17-26. I hope you will come, eagerly expecting the Lord to speak to you through the Word. Until then, I pray you will sit down with your Father and enjoy the feast he has for you, in his Word. It’s living and active, and he has treasures there just for you.

“Hold the power of the universe in your hand
Hold the words that shaped the sky and sea and land
The King has given words to us, to tell us what he's like
Open up your ears and let his Spirit strike

It's a light and a hammer
It's a fire and a sword
It's the voice of our Father
The word of the Lord
The blade of the Spirit can cut to the soul
And God will use it to make us whole”

It’s a Light and a Hammer- Awesome Cutlery

-Natalie

P.S. You can listen to the Awesome Cutlery song on the Bridge Kids Spotify and Amazon playlists.

I Can't Leave You With a Bad Goodbye

“Alexa, play George Strait.”

After two solid months of Christmas music and telling Alexa “SKIP THIS SONG!” every time Mariah Carey began to sing All I Want For Christmas Is You, I was ready for a change in genre. 

It was New Year’s Day, and I was kneading bread dough. Making bread takes time, and the longer the process, the better the flavor. I sang my way through All My Ex’s Live In Texas, I Cross My Heart and every other song George has written. By the time the bread was in the oven and my soup was simmering, we’d moved on to 90’s country. Clint Black’s A Bad Goodbye came on. I danced around the kitchen, crooning into my wooden spoon microphone, but long after the song ended, I was still contemplating goodbyes. 

Clint told his love he couldn’t leave her with a bad goodbye, but honestly, how often do we leave with a good goodbye? Sometimes we leave without even saying goodbye, presuming that time is on our side or a relationship will not sour before we say hello again. And some goodbyes, we know are final. 

As Paul headed to Jerusalem at the end of his third missionary journey, he stopped in several locations to say goodbye to his partners in ministry, whom he had grown to love. There was little doubt that these partings would be the last. Chapter 21 in the NIV opens with these words “After we had torn ourselves away from them…” Have you ever had to say a goodbye like that? I envision star-crossed lovers who will never be together again, or a family as a beloved child leaves for war. Certainly, these words would make sense in those contexts, but it’s not usually how we think about parting with those we love in the church. 

But why not?

I wonder if it’s because sometimes when we part ways in the church it’s because of disagreement. Conflict is something we often try to avoid, and the longer we sit with our frustration, hurt, anger or other emotions bottled up, the more apt the enemy is to join us there. It’s hard to leave in peace when we are in turmoil. 

Here in this portion of Acts, we read about a few warnings that Paul received. Through the Spirit, the disciples at Tyre urged him not to continue to Jerusalem. In Caesarea, a prophet from Agabus visited Paul.  “He took Paul’s belt, tied his own hands and feet with it and said, “The Holy Spirit says, ‘In this way the Jewish leaders in Jerusalem will bind the owner of this belt and will hand him over to the Gentiles.’”When those with Paul heard this, they and the people there pleaded with Paul not to go up to Jerusalem.

Still Paul went. His mind was made up. 

Did Paul disobey the Lord and go in spite of the warnings? Did the Holy Spirit give the warnings only so that Paul and those who loved him would be better prepared for what was to come? Was someone right here, and someone else wrong? 

When Paul would not be dissuaded, those with him gave up and said, “The Lord’s will be done.”

The Bible doesn’t tell us who was right and who was wrong. It does tell us, though, that even in deep disagreement, all agreed that the Lord’s will should and would be done. Paul and his co-laborers knew that ultimately, the Lord’s will WAS going to be done. They couldn’t thwart it, inadvertently or otherwise. 

Neither can we. 

The church in America has said a lot of goodbyes over the past two years. Whether through death, over sharp disagreements, or because of burn out, churches are closing, people are leaving, and Pastors are quitting in record numbers. We’ve felt the loss even at The Bridge, and it hurts. 

What can we do?

God’s will is still going to be done, even in our day. Christ will continue to build his Church. Lord willing, we will continue to make disciples and keep becoming a people who love God wholeheartedly and one another as we love ourselves. 

How we say goodbye matters, because how we love matters. While there may be more goodbyes to come, let’s resolve to love well so that the world will see the gospel on display even in our conflicts, our grief and goodbyes. 

His will be done.

Natalie

Sometimes, the best prayers happen while baking bread, and relationships are mended while breaking bread. I’ve included my favorite recipe below if you want to give it a try.

No Fail Homemade Bread

2 packets of yeast

2 cups of warm water

A dozen shakes of salt from the shaker

Stir together in a large bowl and let sit for ten minutes until the liquid begins to look frothy. 

Add 3 cups of bread flour and 2 cups of all purpose flour, stirring in one cup at a time. 

When the dough no longer sticks to your spoon or hands (using your hands for the last cup is much more satisfying), cover your dough with a towel. I like to set my bowl in a warm place. 

Let dough rise for at least two hours, but the longer it rises, the better it tastes. 

Separate your dough in two, form into a ball, and using a rolling pin, roll each out onto a lightly floured surface. When flattened out to about 1/4 inch thick, begin to roll it into a baguette shape with your hands, tucking the ends. Repeat for the second ball of dough. 

Place on a lightly greased cookie sheet, and bake at 425 degrees for about twenty minutes until loaves just begin to look golden. 

Immediately brush the tops with melted butter or avocado oil, and generously sprinkle with garlic salt (this is the Lord’s salt!), pepper, basil, oregano, rosemary and any other herbs you love. 

Slice it, slather it with butter, and enjoy over good conversation. 

Where Would You Be Without Shame?

We all reach an age where we become aware of and accountable for our actions.  The age of “accountability” can vary, but from this moment forward, it’s all between us and our heavenly Father and His Son Jesus.  What path are you going to choose?  The decision is yours and choosing the right path will lead to a life of beneficial blessings.

The shortest distance between two points is always a straight line.  In life that seldom happens.  We are prone to wander.  Sometimes it’s a little correction to get back on the path, “the straight and narrow” path.  I hope you’ve lived your life without straying too far off course.  If that’s not the case, and you have experienced a time where you were so far off the path you lost your way, then we have something in common. 

It only represented about 15% of my life span, however, during that time I got out in front of my Father and His Son Jesus.  I declared I knew my way and I would take the lead.  I would go where I wanted, do what I wanted, and choose who I wanted to do it with.  All that is a recipe for disaster, followed by pain, heartache, brokenness, sorrow, and shame.

This Sunday, January 2, 2022, I’m going to tell my story.  In reality, I’m only going to be a character in the story.  It’s really a story about my God.  He is the hero in this saga.  The Holy Spirit brought me back to the Father’s house where I found forgiveness, love, joy, peace, and restoration.  So, as they say, it’s all good.  I‘m restored.  Everything is back like it was before.  No, not really.  Oh yes, I’m forgiven, but why do I still feel so burdened?  This feeling, this reality I walked in, occupied roughly the next 25 years of my life.  Think of life like an iceberg.  People saw the visible part above the surface.  I was dealing with what was unseen.  I carried shame because I could not forget.  I had to deal with the collateral damage caused by my sin.

Maybe you have experienced this yourself.  It could be caused by moving in and out of faith.  You know what the Father did.  Some days it’s hard to believe it happened.  Every time you are hit with feelings of insecurity and inferiority, the shame rises in your thoughts.  Maybe you imagine what others might be thinking or saying.

Come to church Sunday and let me tell you my story.  You’ll hear how the Father overcame my shame and helped me get back on the path with Him, walking really close, walking in joy and peace.  I know, with God’s help, you can find where you will be without shame.

Rich Coffman

Merry Christmas and the Goodness of God

Dear Bridge Family,

Merry Christmas!  May we be in awe and wonder that God came near to dwell among us.  May we reflect with family and friends about the goodness and greatness of God.  He came to rescue us from sin and death and restore us to right relationship with Him and others. 

This rescue, this restoration is not a one and done type of thing.  We need continual rescue, continual restoration every moment of every day. 

One thing Jesus rescues us from is a wrong view of God.  A.W. Tozer said “what comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.”  It is possible to know a lot about God but miss the very heart of God.

How does our Heavenly Father feel about us?  Few places in Scripture answer this question better than the Parable of the Prodigal Son.  Charles Dickens said, “It is the finest short story ever written.” 

So – the day after Christmas we will gather to worship the Lord and look closely at this well known, but sometimes forgotten parable.  We will receive hope as we encounter a loving Father who runs to us, embraces us, places a robe on our back, the family ring on our finger, shoes on our feet and celebrates our Homecoming. 

We will also sing the song Reckless Love.  I invite you to listen to it and study the words that describe God’s pursuit of us.

Reckless Love (Official Lyric Video) - YouTube

Before I spoke a word, You were singing over me
You have been so, so good to me
Before I took a breath, You breathed Your life in me
You have been so, so kind to me

Oh, the overwhelming, never-ending, reckless love of God
Oh, it chases me down, fights 'til I'm found, leaves the ninety-nine
I couldn't earn it, and I don't deserve it, still, You give Yourself away
Oh, the overwhelming, never-ending, reckless love of God, yeah

When I was Your foe, still Your love fought for me
You have been so, so good to me
When I felt no worth, You paid it all for me
But You have been so, so kind to me

And oh, the overwhelming, never-ending, reckless love of God
Oh, it chases me down, fights 'til I'm found, leaves the ninety-nine
And I couldn't earn it, and I don't deserve it, still, You give Yourself away
Oh, the overwhelming, never-ending, reckless love of God, yeah

There's no shadow You won't light up
Mountain You won't climb up
Coming after me
There's no wall You won't kick down
Lie You won't tear down
Coming after me
There's no shadow You won't light up
Mountain You won't climb up
Coming after me
There's no wall You won't kick down
Lie You won't tear down
Coming after me

See you Sunday,

Steven

A Thrill of Hope

From the moment Eve took the first bite of forbidden fruit, creation has been groaning and mankind has been in need of a redeemer.

On that fateful day when sin entered the world, a Savior was graciously promised. A glorious King would come who would crush the head of the wicked, wily serpent and rule over the people of Israel.

“And you, O Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, are by no means least among the rulers of Judah; for from you shall come a ruler while will shepherd my people Israel.”  (Matthew 2:6 quoting Micah 5:2)

Such a glorious, hope-filled promise given to God’s people!

But they would have to wait.

Centuries passed, and the world fell headlong into sin with all its devastating effects. Generation after generation would suffer from selfish ambition, power struggles, hate, loss, hunger, and every kind of injustice.

Those who knew of God’s promise and longed for its fulfillment waited eagerly for the Messiah. With each passing year, Israel would wonder, “Is now the time that He will come?”

But as they called out for deliverance, their only answer was death, disease, displacement, and darkness.

And then…

A THRILL OF HOPE!

At long last, God came to live with us. The long-ago Promised One pierced through time and space. The very Word of God was made into skin and bone, entering our world and breathing in our dust.

Wise Men rejoiced at His coming. They fell down in worship and brought gifts that reflected their joy and reverence:

1)     Gold - a precious metal signifying royalty, purity, and value. It was a gift fit for a king.

2)     Frankincense - a very expensive type of incense that was used in worship        ceremonies

3)     Myrrh - a sweet smelling resin that was used for embalming bodies after death

It would seem that the Wise Men somehow had a proper understanding of the life that this royal baby would lead. Even though He was King of kings and worthy of all worship, He humbly came as a poor, defenseless baby. He would live a life just like ours, yet without sin. He would fulfill every requirement needed to be right before God and then drink the cup of God’s wrath in the place of sinners.

“A thrill of hope, the weary world rejoices, for yonder breaks a new and glorious morn.”    (O Holy Night by Adolphe Adam)

Jesus came to live and die for us, but His perfect reign has not yet been fully realized. For those of us who live on this side of the manger, the waiting is not yet over.

One day He will come again to make all things right. All the sad things will become untrue, and death itself will die!

But we will have to wait.

As we celebrate the first advent of our Savior this Christmas, may we long for His second one that is yet to come.

-Becky Groppel

Wonder

And all who heard it wondered at the things which were told them by the shepherds. 

But Mary treasured all these things, pondering them in her heart. — Luke 2:18-19

Wonder: A feeling of surprise mingled with admiration, caused by something beautiful, unexpected, unfamiliar, or inexplicable.

Wonder.

Have you noticed as life ages, our childlike wonder dims? It doesn’t matter whether one is a person of the Christian faith or not; wonder fades and lingers in our youthful memories of past Christmases.

Last Sunday, in our Sunday morning small group, we discussed wonder. We listened to a Christmas song by Kenny Loggins. In his beautiful Christmas song “December,” Loggins longs to capture the childlike wonder he once had.  “Once upon a dream,” sings Loggins, “he knows with all his heart that wonder is coming,” where Loggins reflects on the wonder he once had as a young boy at Christmas. By the song’s ending, “And the Autumn’s ashes,” Loggins still believes in the message of Christmas.

I noticed my loss of wonder the last two holiday seasons watching my young granddaughters visit The Polar Express at Union Station, Santa, decorating our house and listening to them excitedly talk about their Christmas school plays. The wonder of the holiday season brimming in their eyes, minds, and their energy while I, like the boy in The Polar Express story, try to rediscover enchantment.

In his famous sermon “The Weight of Glory,” C.S. Lewis warns the faithful of the evil enchantment of worldliness grounded only in natural happiness and philosophies, which disenchant. Disenchantment separates the divine from our inherent wonder where we long for the beyond. Worldliness wants to convince us Earth is our only home.[1] Death is final.

Lewis felt we could be drawn into this “Negative Spirituality.” Meaning we intellectualize our faith and separate it from its beauty, joy, and vibrancy. Gary Shelby writes, “Lewis gives us a way of living out the faith that is joyful and full of vitality — as God intended it to be. [God] bids us wonder at what the nature of God must have been to create this [beauty and delight]. And He invites us to imagine what it might mean to live eternally in the presence of this God.”[2]

In Luke 2, God bids us wonder in Luke’s narrative of the Shepards and Mary’s stories. God invites us into the Nativity story overflowing with inherent wonder and enchantment and has faith lessons of waiting, listening, seeing, and acting.

The Shepards kept watch over their sheep in quiet solitude (v.8) while Mary later treasured it all within her heart and pondered what all of it meant. (v.19) These are quiet activities of solitude and introspection instead of our haste during the most commercial time of the year, where schedules overflow with activity. There is a centering of one’s soul when one waits and ponders.

Then in seeing and hearing the Angels praise the Glory of God (verse 10-14), the Shepards acted on this Good News, “Let us now go.” (v. 15) The Shepards shared the Good News to the people they encountered “who wondered at the things which were told them.” (v.18) In the act of wonder, the Shepards, and those who heard the message, spread the Good News. God came down to His creation enfleshed as a baby, as our Savior, which is Christ the Lord. So they listened, they saw, and they acted.

We, too, need to Wait. Listen. See. And, finally, Act.

This Advent season, please spend time in wonder and joy, immersed in the beauty of the season. With newness and vitality, embrace the wonder, mystery, and beauty of your faith, and then share the Good News to others, knowing that God’s heavenly wonders are the “secret signature of each soul.”[3]  Merry Christmas!

[1]C.S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory and Other Speeches (New York: HarperCollins, 1949), 31-32.

[2]Gary S. Shelby, Pursuing an Earthy Spirituality: C.S. Lewis and Incarnational Faith (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2019), 13.

[3] Ibid, 32.

God With Us

As we enter week two of Advent, we focus on Joseph and God’s promise of the virgin birth. We meet Joseph in an impossible situation, his bride-to-be Mary is with child. He could have her stoned, but Joseph is a righteous man who contemplates quietly divorcing her instead. However in Matthew 1 v20, we read as Joseph considered his options, God provides Joseph with a third choice, to marry Mary.

Joseph did not rush to a decision. He contemplated his choices, then listened and obeyed the angel’s instructions. This fulfilled the prophecy from Isaiah 7:14 “There the Lord himself will give you a sign:  The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and will call him Immanuel.” Joseph’s obedience, humbleness, and trust in the Lord should not be understated.

I’m reminded of the contemporary Christmas song, “Better You Than Me, Joseph”, which the singer contemplates being in Joseph’s shoes:

“Is the touchstone forcing you to hide, Joseph?

Are the rumors eating you alive, Joseph?”

The song highlights the specialness of Joseph in the Christmas story and outros with “better you than me” sung repeatedly. It’s a light-hearted song but it calls to attention an important lesson. God’s providence is over time and space. Joseph was the exact right person to be Jesus’ earthly father and through his free will Joseph was obedient to God’s instructions despite what cultural norms and personal objections he faced. God has put us here in 2021 for a reason. We all have divine appointments, are we obedient and trusting enough to show up to them?

-Alex Pfister

The Eternal Wonder of Jesus

An astrological event occurred last weekend that was announced as a once in a lifetime event.  It was a lunar eclipse nicknamed a beaver moon.  Did you see it?  I was working with AFD when a co-worker at the firehouse across town sent me a text reminder to look for the eclipse on runs throughout the night.  It was amazing to see and a perfectly clear sky to view it in.  Quite honestly, if it wasn’t for emergency calls getting me out of bed, I probably wouldn’t have got up to see it even though it was promised to be rare and wonderful.  I thanked that co-worker the next morning for pointing my eyes to the stars.  Events like that can feel larger than life but there is an advent that outshines them all!

In our text for this week, we see Mary is visited by Gabriel.  Not only is Gabriel an angelic being, but Gabriel also has a supernatural message about the birth of Jesus as the promised Christ.  Imagine the awe and wonder of Mary in that moment.  Gabriel reported of Jesus’ Kingdom being one with no end.  The prophet Isaiah foretold the same as he described the birth of the Christ child as one whose reign would be forevermore. By these things, we are reminded that Jesus is ETERNAL and His Kingdom is an eternal one.

Isaiah goes on to list a bunch of names to attribute to the coming Messiah.  Jesus is too great for only one name so He will be called, Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father and Prince of Peace.  The angel Gabriel said Jesus will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High.  Jesus is described by both Isaiah and Gabriel as one who is too great for just one name.  By these things, we are reminded that Jesus is WONDERFUL and His Kingdom is amazing. 

This Sunday, we will begin to celebrate Advent.  As we reflect on that moment in history I hope each of us will be filled with awe and wonder as we remember the coming to earth of Jesus of Nazareth.  May we see Isaiah and Gabriel as ones that have pointed our eyes to THE Star of stars – Jesus, the bright Morningstar!  May we rejoice in the favor we have found in Him!  May the joy of our salvation resound in our hearts and overflow from our lips as we praise the Most High for the eternal wonder revealed in His Son!  Let us hope together in His return as our eternal King and wonderful Savior!

Grateful and hopeful in Christ, 

Jon

Prayer for Our Pastors

Paul deeply loved and cared for the people of Ephesus. He had invested in their lives so much, that he had to avoid sailing through their city. This was because in going there, they would be so overjoyed to see him that they would never let him get away in time to celebrate the Pentecost at Jerusalem! So, instead of visiting them personally, he invited the elders of Ephesus to meet him at Miletus where he gave a charge to them in how to care for the people whom Jesus had bought with His very own blood.

Paul encouraged his elders to serve with humility; to preach boldly, and not shrink from truth that is difficult; to be willing to experience hardship; to watch out for wolves who could harm Jesus’ flock; to keep oneself from covetousness; and to care for the people of God.

The Church matters to God. It was purchased at a very high price. Because of this, God ensured that His people have someone to care and watch out for them.

As I read this charge, I am struck by the weight and responsibility of being called to the role of elder or overseer. Such a task can only be done through the power of the Holy Spirit.

For those of us who call The Bridge our home, we have been given an incredible gift. God has given us godly men to serve as our elders and shepherd our souls. It is evident that they love God, His Word, and His people. I can personally attest that our family has been blessed by their care, and I’m sure that you all could say the same.

These men whom God has given us as pastors have the same responsibility as Paul and the Ephesian elders. Their job is a serious one that must not be taken lightly and has eternal ramifications. They serve us with tears, carry the weight of preaching the whole counsel of God, watch out for spiritual dangers, and willingly put themselves through hardship for our good. With such an important task ahead of them, they need to rely on the strength of the Holy Spirit and trust that he will equip them for the good works that He has prepared for them.

This month at The Bridge, we have set aside 21 Days of Prayer. I propose that we each take one of those days to pray fervently for our pastors. Will you pray that God will help them to continue to serve with humility, love, and joy? That God will give them strength, wisdom, boldness, and that they will not grow weary in doing good?

Let’s enter the throne room of grace together with thanksgiving to God for giving us the gift of our pastors.

-Becky Groppel

Opportunities Arise From Changed Plans

I was born and raised in Denver, which means one becomes a Denver Bronco fan for life at birth.  Last week, one of the most popular players in the franchise’s history and a Future Hall of Fame inductee, Von Miller, was traded to another team. The trade stunned him.  In a press conference, he said, “If you want to make God laugh, tell Him your plans.”

Why do I mention Von Miller’s trade story? Because like Von Miller and what Paul found out in Acts 20:1-12, we too learn the plans we make, and God’s plan can be different.  Paul had plans regarding his ministry and travels, while God had other plans for him.  However, the Lord’s change in Paul’s agenda also most likely led to the creation of Luke’s Gospel and his book of Acts, and a miracle connecting the Old and New Testaments.[1]  All which helped spread the Gospel of Jesus Christ worldwide.

Because of Paul’s continued teaching in the synagogues and the conversion of synagogue leaders and many members, nonbelieving Jews were still upset with Paul and plotted to kill him.

Because of these evil intentions, Paul’s travel plans changed from his desire to go from Syria to Jerusalem for the Passover to backtracking through Macedonia and its region, including Philippi, where he met Luke. Luke joined him for the trip to Jerusalem (“we” in verse 6).  If he followed his original plans, Paul would not have bumped into Luke, which most likely means no Gospel by Luke and perhaps Acts. Luke would not have traveled to Jerusalem with Paul where he interviewed Peter, John, Mark, and other eyewitnesses, the sources for his writings.[2]

Paul eventually caught up with his companions listed earlier in these verses, and before Paul set sail, they broke bread, most likely sang songs, and had a meal. Paul gave a message late into the night, leading to a young man falling asleep (full stomach, low light, late night), falling out of a window, and dying. Here is where the miracle of Paul raising the young man back to life is linked to the Old Testament prophets Elijah and Elisha’s miracles of bringing two boys back to life. Luke’s description of Paul “fell on him” (v.10) indicated Paul used the same body movement as those two prophets in their miracles of raising a person back to life.

I noticed in this story of adapting that Paul's friends separated from him for a time, but eventually met up together where they “came together” (v.7) to break bread, sing, worship, and listen to Paul’s message.  Sound familiar?

Our church had plans the pandemic changed. In adapting to the times, friends and family separated for a time.  But here is a key to Paul’s story and our church story.  Once again, there was a coming together, a meeting up with each other to break bread, sing, worship, and to hear a message. 

As this pandemic’s impact slowly meanders down and plans are updated, the time has come for the church community to move from a pixelated world and screens to a personal coming together to meet, study, break bread, sing, worship, and listen to a message.

The church's future rests in a community of believers being where the world expects us to be on a Sunday morning (now on the first day of the week, when the disciples came together v.7), worshiping together in honoring the Lord on the Sabbath.

-Dan Nickel

[1]Charles Swindoll, Living Insights: Acts (Carol Stream, Illinois: Tyndale, 2016), 397 - 400.

[2] Ibid.

Worthless Idols

What causes you the most anxiety? You know the kind - it wakes you in the middle of the night, and won’t let you fall back asleep. You toss and turn and fret about possible scenarios, wondering how you can gain control of the situation, until you wear yourself out from exhaustion and worry.

This almost always happens to me when I’m worried about money. I look at all of the things on the horizon that need extra cash and I panic. The water heater goes out unexpectedly. A friend needs help. Sometimes I simply think having something new or better will satisfy a craving in my heart.

Eve thought the same thing. The fruit in Eden was a delight to the eyes, but in the end what seemed irresistible to her and Adam led to death for all humanity.

Our souls have an enemy.

He comes to steal, kill and destroy, but he disguises himself as an angel of light.

He tells us that we aren’t wrong to make security our highest aim.

He whispers that we deserve to be happy, and we should get rid of anything, and anyone, who doesn’t contribute to that.

He tempts us with pleasure; with an insatiable desire for food, alcohol and sex.

He says the heart should have what the heart wants, and we bend our ear closer as he talks because that’s just what we want to hear.

There is also One who loves our soul, and he speaks a better, albeit harder, word: “And this is the judgment: the light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil.”

“Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. The eye is the lamp of the body. So, if your eye is healthy, your whole body will be full of light, but if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light in you is darkness, how great is the darkness! No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money.”

In Ephesus the name of the Lord Jesus was being glorified. As people turned away from idols and to the living God, livelihoods were threatened. Those whose self-worth and financial security came from the sale of silver trinkets, turned their anger upon Paul.

They wanted to kill Paul, but what they needed to put to death were the things that belonged to their earthly nature: sexual immorality, impurity, lust, evil desires and greed, which is idolatry. And so do we.

We can’t serve two masters. Whose voice are we listening to…and whose are we following?

The one who hates us tells us what we want to hear. His way seems right to us, but it ends in death.

The One who loves us tells we must take up our cross and follow him. In this world we will have trouble, but in Him we will find joy everlasting.

“Those who cling to worthless idols turn away from God’s love for them.”
By the power of his Spirit, may we be a church who casts aside our idols and turns fully toward Jesus.

Praying he satisfies us with his love,

-Natalie Runyon

The Holy Spirit Touch

"Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?" (Acts 19:1)

"No, we have not even heard that there is a Holy Spirit." (Acts 19:2)

Have you ever been late to a movie - like 30 minutes late? Or you are watching your favorite TV show, but you miss a key episode? These "disciples" have obviously missed an "episode." They are disciples of John the Baptist, but they do not know Jesus and they definitely know nothing about Pentecost, but when Paul tells them about JESUS "immediately they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus. And when Paul laid his hands on them, the Holy Spirit came on them, and they began speaking in tongues and prophesying." (Acts 19:5-6) These disciples were open and receptive and hungry for God's touch.

What did they experience when the Holy Spirit came upon them?

Martyn Lloyd Jones describes it this way:

He says it is like a child walking along holding his father’s hand. All is well. The child is happy. He feels secure. His father loves him. He believes that his father loves him but there is no unusual urge to talk about this or sing about it. It is true and it is pleasant.

Then suddenly the father startles the child by reaching down and sweeping him up into his arms and hugging him tightly and kissing him on the neck and whispering, “I love you so much!” And then holding the stunned child back so that he can look into his face and saying with all his heart, “I am so glad you are mine.” Then hugging him once more with unspeakable warmth and affection. Then he puts the child down and they continue their walk.


This, Lloyd-Jones says, is what happens when a person is baptized with the Holy Spirit. A pleasant and happy walk with God is swept up into an unspeakable new level of joy and love and assurance and reality that leaves the Christian so utterly certain of the immediate reality of Jesus that he is overflowing in praise and more free and bold in witness than he ever imagined he could be.


The child is simply stunned. He doesn’t know whether to cry or shout or fall down or run, he is so happy. The fuses of love are so overloaded they almost blow out. The subconscious doubts—that he wasn’t thinking about at the time, but that pop up every now and then—are gone! And in their place is utter and indestructible assurance, so that you know that you know that you know that God is real and that Jesus lives and that you are loved, and that to be saved is the greatest thing in the world. And as you walk on down the street you can scarcely contain yourself, and you want to cry out, “My father loves me! My father loves me! O, what a great father I have! What a father! What a father!”

This filling of the Holy Spirit is something I deeply desire and desperately need. Don't you?

Others who hear the message of Jesus "become stubborn and continued in unbelief, speaking evil of the Way." (Acts 19:9) But God still pursues people. He heals those who are hurting. "And God was doing extraordinary miracles by the hands of Paul, so that even handkerchiefs or aprons that had touched his skin were carried away to the sick, and their diseases left them and the evil spirit came out of them." (Acts 19:11-12)

Did you notice who is doing the "extraordinary miracles?" It's God. It's always God. But notice it is "by the hands of Paul."

When God softens our heart and stirs our affection by filling us with the Holy Spirit the things we touch will point to God's healing and deliverance. We will extol the name of the Lord Jesus. (Acts 19:17) We will confess our sins and throw our idols into the fire. (Acts 19:18-19) We will watch "the word of the Lord continue to increase and prevail mightily." (Acts 19:20)

May we be those who pray for the continual filling of the Holy Spirit. May this kind of renewal and revival happen in us and in our community, country and world. Come Holy Spirit Come. Come Lord Jesus come.

See you Sunday,

Steven Helfrich

Always Stay A Student

This week’s scripture begins Paul's third missionary journey as he leaves Ephesus and sets out to Antioch. Something special about this portion of scripture is not what Paul goes and does but what he leaves behind in Ephesus.

Here we meet a man named Apollos, a “learned man, with a thorough knowledge of the Scriptures.” He “spoke with great fervor”, “talked about Jesus accurately”, and “began to speak boldly in the synagogue.” If you were only going to have a few lines written about you, you could do much worse.

However, despite his knowledge and courage, Apollos was incomplete. He only knew about Jesus from what John the Baptist preached (focused on the repentance of sin). He was missing the story of Jesus’ life, crucifixion, and resurrection. And at this point, two beautiful things happen in our story.

First, we have Aquila and Priscilla take Apollos aside, inviting him into their home and explaining Jesus’ life and the points Apollos was missing. What gentle courage this must have taken.

Second, we have Apollos who could have been satisfied with what he had learned and continued to preach his incomplete story. That’s what pride, or having an ego, can do to us. “Too often, convinced of our own intelligence, we stay in a comfort zone that ensures that we never feel stupid… It (ego) obscures from view various weaknesses in our understanding… Like sirens on the rocks, ego sings a soothing, validating song” writes Ryan Holiday in the book Ego is the Enemy.

But Apollos wasn’t threatened by what he didn’t know, he kept learning and accepted Aquila and Priscilla’s teaching. Staying a student, and not assuming he knew it all, allowed Apollos to get the complete story of Jesus. He then used his natural skills and his newfound knowledge on his own missionary journey, with the endorsement of the Ephesus believers, proving from the Scriptures that Jesus was the Christ.

It’s never been easier than today to inform others of our own knowledge and opinions, let Apollos’ story remind and encourage us to stay the student, and don’t let our ego assume we’ve graduated from learning.

-Alex Pfister

Purpose in Disruption

Acts.png

”After this Paul left Athens and went to Corinth. And he found a Jew named Aquila, a native of Pontus, recently come from Italy with his wife Priscilla, because Claudius had commanded all the Jews to leave Rome.”

Acts 18:1-2

Have you ever experienced hardship outside of your control, at no fault of your own, and been left to wonder, “What now? Where do I go from here?”

Have you ever started a sentence with the phrase, “If only…”?

-“If only I hadn’t lost my job…”

-“If only my close family member were still alive…”

-“If only we hadn’t gotten in that accident…”

-“If only we lived in a different place…”

If the answer to either of these questions is “yes”, you are not alone. And the good news is that there is hope offered to your weary, anxious soul.

As we begin Acts 18, we see that Paul is traveling once again and arrives in the city of Corinth. It is there that we meet Aquilla and Priscilla (sometimes called Prisca), victims of religious persecution and displacement.

In AD 49, all Jews were forced to leave their homes in Rome and relocate, most likely due to unrest amongst Christians and Jews in the synagogue. Aquila and Priscilla, being from Italy, were among the throngs whose lives were forever changed as they had no other choice but to resettle in a new place. 

To the reader in 2021, this just looks like a few words on a page as an interlude to Paul’s ministry. But to Aquila and Priscilla, this meant a new country, language, and culture. It no doubt meant many tearful goodbyes as they lost contact with family and friends, probably forever. It meant the loss of hopes and dreams for their future. I can only imagine as they started their new lives, they were asking themselves, “What now?” and mulling over thoughts that began with “If only…”

But God had not forgotten this displaced couple. He had a purpose and plan for them that would impact His Kingdom for all eternity.

When Paul entered Corinth, he met Aquila and Priscilla, and there seems to have been an immediate bond. Having the same trade as tentmakers, the couple opened up their home to Paul, and a friendship and co-partnership in ministry was born. Their home became Paul’s home base in Corinth where he lived, worked, and was refreshed. 

We know that their friendship became an invaluable treasure to Paul. He mentions them 3 different times in his letters to believers and expresses his love and thanks for them as they had “risked their necks for [his] life” (Romans 16:3,4). What a special ministry this godly couple had!

I am reminded of Joseph in Genesis when he declared to his 11 brothers who sold him into slavery, “God sent me before you to preserve life…so it was not you who sent me here, but God” (Genesis 45:5,8).

Yes, the brothers had indeed done wickedly and sent Joseph to Egypt. But Joseph saw through supernatural lenses and knew that it was in actuality his sovereign God who had displaced him in order to save the lives of millions.

In the same way, Aquilla and Priscilla had been forced out of their home and country by a government who sought them unjust harm. But even in their mistreatment, God sovereignly used that trial to bring them to the very city where Paul would need lodging, encouragement, and friendship. 

Yes, they had been treated unfairly. But they were exactly where they needed to be to bring life to Paul and thereby bringing life to any person whom Paul would serve in the future.

What Claudius meant for evil, God meant for good.

God is still working in the same way in your life today. If you have found yourself the victim of hardship outside of your control, be encouraged by Aquilla and Priscilla’s story. Nothing can thwart God’s plan. He is so powerful that He can even use injustice and sin to use you in mighty ways, bring Himself glory, and preserve life. He has not left you without a purpose in the unexpected disruptions of life.

Who knows the lives that you will bless and refresh because of what you have gone through in the past as well as what you are experiencing right now?

And although we may never know on this side of eternity the reasons why we experience suffering, we can know this:

Jesus suffered for you so he could walk with you in the valley. And you are right where He wants you to be.

-Becky Groppel