The following postings are sermons preached by Rev. Ed Brouwer at the Gathering Place, Osoyoos, British Columbia.
We don't change the Word of God, it changes us!
WARNING: These messages may be hazardous to your carnal nature.
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Preached by Rev. Ed Brouwer at The Gathering Place, Osoyoos
Pulpit Series Volume 19 Issue 38 December 6, 2009
My Guest
Joseph: described by Matthew's gospel “a righteous man”.
I would ask him how he felt when he found out that the girl he was engaged to was pregnantby someone else.
·Was he humiliated?
·Was he embarrassed?
·Was he angry?
Did he have trouble believing Mary when she said God was the babies father?
The Bible says he loved both God and Mary, and it seems he really struggled with the decision of what to do.
That he was truly a “good man”is seen in his decision to “divorce her quietly” rather than humiliate her publicly.
I admire his faith - come on think about it. To believe the message of a dream... “that he should accept the baby in Mary's womb as the Son of God and share with her the humiliation and endure with her the small town gossip….. take her into his home, protect her, care for her and her baby, and that he should raise “God's Son”, as his own child.” Then I’d like to talk to him about the fact that their baby was born in an animal shelterbecause “there was no room for them in the inn”.
Why did he have to go to an inn in the first place?
After all, Bethlehem was Joseph's home town. Why wouldn't he and Mary have been able to stay with family or friends?
What made them so unwelcome in their homes?
·Was it because the scandal of Mary's pregnancy?
·Was it because Joseph continued to love and care for her?
It seems Christmas cost Joseph his family andfriends.
Then the fact that they had to flee for their lives to Egypt leaving behind their home, business everything they had!
Think of Joseph having to take his family into a foreign country where they didn't understand the language or the culture.
I really respect Joseph for being willing to pay the price of bringing Jesus into his world and for that matter into ours.
Joseph paid a price that actually relates to each of us as fellow believers. Joseph cared for Mary while Christ was being formed in her.
He set aside his ambitions and desires in order to nurture, train, and develop this young one,the child of God. His greatest task and his real success was not in how many tables and chairs he built, but in nurturing and developing Jesus so that He could fulfill His mission.
When I look at Joseph’s life and very few people do, I see that none of us have been chosen to do our own thing,
but rather to develop the
Jesus-lifein others.
Think about it, Joseph accepted the responsibility to care for, protect and nurture the life of God's Son.
Is that not to be our primary focus - our life the task of:
·Developing
·Discipling
·Influencing
·Training
·Protecting
·Nurturing
·Equipping
……. people for the kingdom of God.
Our life task is developing the
Jesus-lifein those with
whose lives and futures
we’ve been entrusted. In closing please consider the Cost of Christmas...
·What will it cost you to bring Jesus into your world?
·What will it cost you to bring Jesus into your family, your workplace, your circle of friends and acquaintances?
It may not involve public humiliation or relocating to another country, but than again it might!
It may involve some misunderstanding, some discomfort, some sacrifice, some changes in your life.
Certainly it will involve less of you
and more of God.
It may involve less of what you can do and achieve and more of what you can develop and nurture in others.
Once again,
God is looking for Josephs
to accept the responsibility for nurturing, discipling and developing
the life of Jesus in others,
even if it means
taking a less prominent role
for themselves.
I encourage you to do as Joseph did and give yourself to developing the Jesus life in others.
Blessings to you and your family this Christmas!
I HEARD the bells on Christmas Day
Their old, familiar carols play
And wild and sweet
The words repeat
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
And thought how, as the day had come
The belfries of all Christendom
Had rolled along
The unbroken song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
Till ringing, singing on its way,
The world revolved from night to day
A voice, a chime
A chant sublime
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
Then from each black, accursed mouth
The cannon thundered in the South,
And with the sound
The carols drowned
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
It was as if an earthquake rent
The hearth-stones of a continent
And made forlorn
The households born
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
And in despair I bowed my head
“There is no peace on earth,” I said
“For hate is strong,
And mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!”
Then pealed the bells more loud and deep
“God is not dead, nor doth He sleep”
The Wrong shall fail
The Right prevail
With peace on earth, good-will to men!
Preached by Rev. Ed Brouwer at The Gathering Place, Osoyoos
Pulpit Series Volume 19 Issue 35 November 15, 2009
I love the way Jesus taught. It was easy to understand always relevant, and of course applicable. It was “do-able”. His goal was to transform people, not merely inform them.
Sermons that ask people to change without sharing the practical steps of how to change only produce guilt and frustration.
Matthew 5When Jesus saw his ministry drawing huge crowds, he climbed a hillside. Those who were apprenticed to him, the committed, climbed with him. Arriving at a quiet place, he sat down and taught his climbing companions.
Jesus began by sharing eight secrets of genuine happiness;
1.You're blessed when you're at the end of your rope.
2.You're blessed when you feel you've lost what is most dear.
3.You're blessed when you're content with just who you are.
4.You're blessed when you have a good appetite for God.
5.You're blessed when you care, for you will be cared for.
6.You're blessed when you get your inside world—your mind and heart—put right.
7.You're blessed when you can show people how to cooperate instead of compete or fight.
8.You're blessed when your commitment to God provokes persecution. This drives you deeper into God's kingdom.
Then Jesus spoke to his climbing companions about living an exemplary lifestyle, controlling anger, restoring relationships, and the issues of adultery and divorce.
Let me tell you why you are here. You're here to be seasoning that brings out the God-flavors of this earth. If you lose your saltiness, how will people taste godliness?
Here's another way to put it: You're here to be light, bringing out the God-colors in the world. God is not a secret to be kept.Keep open house; be generous with your lives. By opening up to others, you'll prompt people to open up with God.
This is how I want you to conduct yourself in these matters. If you enter your place of worship and, about to make an offering, you suddenly remember a grudge a friend has against you, abandon your offering, leave immediately, go to this friend and make things right.
Then and only then, come back and work things out with God.
Or say you're out on the street and an old enemy accosts you. Don't lose a minute. Make the first move; make things right with him.
Adultery and Divorce
You know the next commandment pretty well, too: 'Don't go to bed with another's spouse.' But don't think you've preserved your virtue simply by staying out of bed. Your heart can be corrupted by lust even quicker than your body.
Those leering looks you think nobodynotices—they also corrupt.
Let's not pretend this is easier than it really is. If you want to live a morally pure life, here's what you have to do: You have to blind your right eye the moment you catch it in a lustful leer.
You have to choose to live one-eyed or else be dumped on a moral trash pile. And you have to chop off your right hand the moment you notice it raised threateningly.
Better a bloody stump than your entire being discarded for good in the dump.
Remember the Scripture that says, 'Whoever divorces his wife, let him do it legally, giving her divorce papers and her legal rights'? Too many of you are using that as a cover for selfishness and whim, pretending to be righteous just because you are 'legal.' Please, no more pretending. If you divorce your wife, you're responsible for making her an adulteress (unless she has already made herself that by sexual promiscuity). And if you marry such a divorced adulteress, you're automatically an adulterer yourself. You can't use legal cover to mask a moral failure.
Next he spoke of keeping promises
And don't say anything you don't mean.You only make things worse when you lay down a smoke screen of pious talk, saying, 'I'll pray for you,' and never doing it, or saying, 'God be with you,' and not meaning it. You don't make your words true by embellishing them with religious lace. Just say 'yes' and 'no.' When you manipulate words to get your own way, you go wrong.
Then Jesus moved on to other practical life issues.Like how to give with the right attitude, how to pray, and how to store up treasure in heaven.
Completing God's Law
Don't suppose for a minute that I have come to demolish the Scriptures— either God's Law or the Prophets. I'm not here to demolish but to complete. I am going to put it all together.
God's Law is more real and lasting than the stars in the sky and the ground at your feet. Unless you do far better than the Pharisees in the matters of right living, you won't know the first thing about entering the kingdom.
You're familiar with the command to the ancients, 'Do not murder.' I'm telling you that anyone who is so much as angry with a brother or sister is guilty of murder.
Here's another old saying that deserves a second look: 'Eye for eye, tooth for tooth.' Is that going to get us anywhere? Here's what I propose: 'Don't hit back at all.' If someone strikes you, stand there and take it. If someone drags you into court and sues for the shirt off your back, gift wrap your best coat and make a present of it. And if someone takes unfair advantage of you, use the occasion to practice the servant life.
No more tit-for-tat stuff. Live generously.
"You're familiar with the old written law, 'Love your friend,' and its unwritten companion, 'Hate your enemy.' I'm challenging that. I'm telling you to love your enemies. Let them bring out the best in you, not the worst. When someone gives you a hard time, respond with the energies of prayer, for then you are working out of your true selves, your God-created selves.
This is what God does. He gives his best—the sun to warm and the rain to nourish—to everyone, regardless: the good and bad, the nice and nasty.
If all you do is love the lovable, do you expect a bonus? Anybody can do that.
If you simply say hello to those who greet you, do you expect a medal?
Any run-of-the-mill sinner does that.
He wraps up his message by telling us to not judge others, encouraging persistence when asking God to meet our needs, and warning us about false teachers.
What I'm saying is, Grow up. You're kingdom subjects. Now live like it. Live out your God-created identity. Live generously and graciously toward others, the way God lives toward you.
This is the kind of preaching that we need in churches today.
We need Jesus style teaching it makes a difference in peoples day-to-day lives.
Jesus said, I have come that you might have life. He didn’t say, I’ve come that you might have religion. Christianity is a life.
When Jesus finished his teaching he usually wanted them to go and do likewise.
Christ-like preaching explains life to people. It produces a changed lifestyle.
Life-related preaching doesn’t just inform, it transforms.
It changes people because the Word is applied where people actually live.
Preached by Rev. Ed Brouwer at The Gathering Place, Osoyoos
Pulpit Series Volume 19 Issue 34 November 8, 2009
WW I - 1914 Canada’s population was just over 3 million, mostly women and children.Of the men and women who VOLUNTEERED 60,000 were killed, 120,000 were wounded.
April 22, 1915, the Germans used poison gas for the first time, as 145 tons of chlorine gas drifted over the trenches, the Canadian troops held and stopped the German advance. The casualties were enormous. In two days 1/3 of Canadians died.
April 1917, the Canadians won a major victory at Vimy Ridge. There were more than 10,000 casualties in six days but a year latter, on November 11, the Armistice was signed and the Canadians took part in the triumphant entry into Belgium.
WW2:It was 1939 and again Canadians flocked to enlist. For almost six years, Canadians fought valiantly on battlefronts around the world. More than one million men and women enlisted in the army, the navy and the air force. When the war was over, more than 45,000 had given their lives.
The Gospel of Saint John says, Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.
We as Canadians had best remember the price our friends paid for our freedom.And we as Christians had best remember the price our Friend Jesus paid for us.
When war came, Canadians volunteered readily to serve their country as champions of liberty. They came from farms, from small towns and large cities across the country, riding high on the initial wave of indignation, excitement, and patriotism.For the men and women who rallied to support their nation's cause, the threats of war seemed far away and unreal.
In the fall of 1914 as the 1st contingent of Canadians left the shelter of the St. Lawrence for the open Atlantic, some of the realities came into focus....How could they know that four long years of death and destruction were ahead?
There is much to remember.
Foremost are the people, the men and women who served wherever they were needed. They faced difficult situations bravely and brought honor to themselves, to their loved ones and to their country.
They were ordinary Canadians who made extraordinary sacrifices.
It is good to remember today, But I believe it only proper that in our daily living we remember their great sacrifice!
Deuteronomy 8:1-5 Keep and live out the entire commandment I'm commanding you today so you'll live and prosper and enter and own the land that God promised to your ancestors.
Rememberevery road that God led you on for those forty years in the wilderness, pushing you to your limits, testing you so that he would know what you were made of, whether you would keep his commandments or not.
He put you through hard times. He made you go hungry. Then he fed you with manna, something neither you nor your parents knew anything about, so you would learn that men and women don't live by bread only; we live by every word that comes from God's mouth.
Your clothes didn't wear out and your feet didn't blister those forty years. You learned deep in your heart that God disciplines you in the same ways a father disciplines his child.
Deuteronomy 8:6-9 it's paramount you keep the commandments of God, your God, walk down the roads he shows you and reverently respect him. God is about to bring you into a good land, a land with brooks and rivers, springs and lakes, streams out of the hills and through the valleys. It's a land of wheat and barley, of vines and figs and pomegranates, olives, oil, and honey. It's land where you'll never go hungry—always food on the table and a roof over your head. It's a land where you'll get iron out of rocks and mine copper from the hills.
Deuteronomy 8:10-16 After a meal, satisfied, bless God, your God, for the good land he has given you.
Make sure you don't forget God, your God, by not keeping his commandments, his rules and regulations that I command you today. Make sure that when you eat and are satisfied, build pleasant houses and settle in, see your herds and flocks flourish and more and more money come in, watch your standard of living going up and up—make sure you don't become so full of yourself and your things that you forget your God.
·The God who delivered you from Egyptian slavery;
·The God who led you through that huge and fearsome wilderness, those desolate, arid badlands crawling with fiery snakes and scorpions;
·The God who gave you water gushing from hard rock;
·The God who gave you manna to eat in the wilderness, something your ancestors had never heard of, in order to give you a taste of the hard life, to test you so that you would be prepared to live well in the days ahead of you.
Deuteronomy 8:17-18 If you start thinking to yourselves, "I did all this. And all by myself. I'm rich. It's all mine!"— well, think again. Remember that God, your God, gave you the strength to produce all this wealth so as to confirm the covenant that he promised to your ancestors—as it is today.
Deuteronomy 8:19-20 If you forget, forget God, your God, and start taking up with other gods, serving and worshiping them, I'm on record right now as giving you firm warning: that will be the end of you; I mean it—destruction. You'll go to your doom—the same as the nations God is destroying before you; doom because you wouldn't obey the Voice of God, your God.
May God be glorified in our living!
Remember your salvation: Exodus 13:3 Moses said, Always remember this day. This is the day when you came out of Egypt from a house of slavery. God brought you out of here with a powerful hand.
Remember where you’ve come from: Exodus 22:21, Leviticus 19:33-34 When a foreigner lives with you in your land, don't take advantage of him, Love him like one of your own.Remember, you were once foreigners in Egypt.
Remember your deliverance: Deuteronomy 7:16-18 You're going to think to yourselves, "Oh! We're outnumbered ten to one by these nations! We'll never even make a dent in them!" But I'm telling you, Don't be afraid.
Remember, yes, remember in detail what God, your God, did to Pharaoh and all Egypt.
Remember the great contests to which you were eyewitnesses: the miracle-signs, the wonders, God's mighty hand as he stretched out his arm and took you out of there.
God, your God, is going to do the same thing for you today!
Did you know that there are 591 pictures taken every second? That's 51.1 million every day. We take 3 billion photographs just during the Christmas holiday season. If a picture is worth a 1000 words, that’d be a big book.We do all this to help our memory.We need things to strengthen or jar our memory.
The Bible makes an interesting statement in Proverbs 10:7 (NIV) "The memory of the Righteous will be a blessing!"
Preached by Rev. Ed Brouwer at The Gathering Place, Osoyoos
Pulpit Series Volume 19 Issue 33 November 1, 2009
Yesterday was Halloween - proving once again that darkness is all about us… It seems the deep depravity of man, social evils, worldliness and immodesty are all accepted in today’s light views of sin.
The whole world lies in darkness and sadly we Christians are getting used to the dark.I John 5:19
Vance Havner one of my favorite preachers points out that we as Christians are to expose the darkness not so much by denouncing it as by the sharp contrast of our godly living.
The early Christians did not dim their lights to match the times”
Today I want to encourages every Christian to beware of getting used to the dark and to consciously work at turning on the light.
Luke 11:33-34 No man when he lights a candle puts it in a secret place. neither under a bushel; but on a candle stick, that they which come in may see the light.
In His Sermon on the Mount in Matthew 5:14-16 Jesus gives this responsibility to us to be the Light of the World. Paul challenges us with this same responsibility in Ephesians 5:8-14 and in Philippians 2:14-16. Peter also teaches this in I Peter 2:9-12.
Jesus says that when others see our good lives and our good works, they will be forced to glorify our Father in heaven.
Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove themEphesians 5:11
Man has never had more artificial illumination and less true light.
We are seeing not ordinary moral corruption, but evil multiplied, a darkness never heard of a generation ago.
There is a slow, subtle, sinister brainwashing process going on and by it we are gradually being desensitized to evil. The night is far spent and we are getting used to the darkness.
Little by little, sin is made to appear less sinful until the light within us becomes darkness, and how great is that darkness!
We are engulfed in a tidal wave of pornographic filth. Television has brought the darkness right in our living room.
We get used to it. We accept, as a matter of course, its art, its literature, its music, its language. We learn to live with it without an inner protest.As the prophet said, we don’t even blush anymore.
Lot was a righteous man, pitched his tent toward Sodom, then he moved into Sodom, lived in it, probably became its mayor. His soul was vexed from day to day with the Sodomites’ unlawful deeds, but he lost his influence with his family, had to flee for his life, and died in disgrace.
As it was in the days of Lot. Even thus shall it be in the day when the Son of man is revealed Luke 17:28-30
Sit long enough in a dark room and you will imagine that more light is breaking in. The same danger exists with regard to worldliness. If you are not living separated unto the Lord you will soon find this world less repulsive.
Rather than being a lightand expose the darkness we turn our lights down and get used to the darkness around us.Of course we do not get used to it all of a sudden.
Folks there are some things we have no right ever to get used to. One, is brutality. The other is sexual immorality. Both, have now come together and are moving towards a dominant pattern.
There was a time when sin shocked us. But as the brainwashing progresses, what once set us back now doesn’t even make us blush.
We are not supposed to learn how to live in the dark, we are to walk in the light.
Church workers fall into grievous sin and move on to new positions without repentance or change of conduct. Parents let down in discipline, saying, “What’s the use?” Pastors give up preaching against sin, arguing that the world’s evils are here to stay.
The world lives in the dark... it rejects Jesus the Light of the world: And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil John 3:19
This light shines in Christ: I am the light of the world. John 8:12It shines in the Scriptures: Your word is a lamp for my feet, and a light for my path Psalm 119:105
It shines in the saints: You are the light of the world Matthew 5:14
Every one that does evil hates the light, neither comes to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved John 3:20 This might explain why some people don’t come to church.
Have you ever overturned a rock in a field?All the hidden creeping and crawling things hit by the sunlight scurry for cover. In the same way our sinful hearts grow restless in the light of God’s truth.
Christians are to let their light shine. As the moon reflects the light of the sun, so we are to reflect the light of Christ. The way Christ makes us His lights in the world is by living in us by His Holy Spirit. The light we reflect is actually Christ living out His life in us. This is taught in Galatians 2:20.Think about an eclipse.
We expose darkness not so much by denouncing it, although that has its place, but by the contrast of our godly living. Sadly we are so afraid of being offensive that we are no longer effective!
Our Lord said that two things would smother the light of our testimony, a bushel and a bed. Today we dim our light in the third way: we turn it low for fear of creating a disturbance. It would seem we would rather grieve the Holy Spirit than offend the wicked.
The early Christians did not dim their lights to match the times.
Paul exceedingly troubled the places he visited, and even in prison at midnight he turned night into day. Early Christians met in the catacombs, but they illuminated the world.
We are to shine as lights in the world. This is no time to get used to the dark; it is time to turn up the Light!
Early Christianity set the world aglow because absolute Light was pitched against absolute darkness. The early Christians believed that the Gospel was the only hope of the world, that without it all men were lost and all religions false.
Then the day came when the church and the world mixed light and darkness.Today many Christians think there is some darkness in our light and some light in the world’s darkness. We half doubt our own Gospel and half believe the religion of this age.
Question:What is half cold and half hot?
We are creeping around in the dark when we should be flooding the world with light.
We need to take the shades of compromise off of our lamps and let them shine in our hearts, our homes, our businesses, our churches, and our communities.