Insights

Reverend Dr. William H. Curtis

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The Church and Its Head
And God placed all things under his feet and appointed him to be head over everything for the church, which is his body, the fullness of him who fills everything in every way.
Ephesians 1:22-23 (NIV)

Many people think the priority of the church is to be the body of Christ. This highlights the interconnectedness of believers. The idea is that each member has a unique role to play in fulfilling God’s purposes. Each person has a function. Each person is critical to the church’s ability to fulfill its mission. Each person is responsible for the care and the wellbeing of others in the assembly.

The perspective on how the church ought to focus itself and operate, however, can vary a great deal. Some people have an image of the church and prioritize it as an institution. For them, the church is measured by its structure, its doctrines, its traditions, and its governance. People who lean heavily toward this kind of view place priority on leadership, governance, and doctrinal fidelity. Now that has a temptation associated with it: you can get stuck in the view of the church as an organization, which can mean you forget its priority to care for the people who assemble inside of it.

Some image the church as a missional community and emphasize its role in mission and outreach, both locally and globally. Some may have priority for the mission and forget the care we owe one another.

Many people view the church where the priority is as a worshiping community. For people who make this the primary function of the church, they emphasize worship, prayer, and sacraments (like communion, baptism, and weddings). The person who prioritizes the church based upon its worship will have a preoccupation with the performance and may not place any priority on the mission.

Because of all these possibilities, Paul reminds us that what brings us together, regardless of our prioritized distinctions, is the commonality of Christ. 

People have all kinds of views and expectations of the church. So the question is, what was God’s original purpose? What are you a part of? You’re part of what gathers to represent Christ in the world, to carry out Christ’s mission. You are called out, summoned to gather with others who believe in Jesus. And if we meet in the common belief in Jesus, differences evaporate in His being the head over everything.

A Fall from the Upstairs Window
Seated in a window was a young man named Eutychus, who was sinking into a deep sleep as Paul talked on and on. When he was sound asleep, he fell to the ground from the third story and was picked up dead. Paul went down, threw himself on the young man and put his arms around him. “Don’t be alarmed,” he said. “He’s alive!”
Acts 20:9-10 (NIV)

What if, instead of making your pain, your struggle, your anger, or your fear a bully, you allowed it to highlight your weaknesses and your vulnerabilities? What if you consecrated these things and made them like a holy offering to God?

Stop blaming Satan for every slippage. Don’t feel less than a Christian because you have questions, doubts, and suspicions. In fact, don’t demonize your struggle. Make it sacred. Consecrate your struggles.  

This is how we grow through our experiences. We don’t abandon or negate them; we consecrate them and make them sacred so we can imagine them as ways that God wants to bless us. The one conviction we must carry is this: there is no second of any day and no circumstance where God is not in control.

And if God is in control, that means you may not have chosen the struggle, but God is not ignorant to the struggle; He is working it together for your good. He’s ordering your steps. You’re living according to His providence. He has plans for you and He’s leading and guiding you. Don’t make your struggle a satanic attack; make it sacred and decide you’re going to be great for God even in the midst of it. Make it holy. 

In fact, surrender it to God so that you learn to thank God that He has graced you to see His goodness in a new way. This is how God originally intended for us to think about these hard falls.

Eutychus’s fall was not to demonstrate the power of death. His fall was to teach us the power of life and that God can bring us back from anything, even if it stretches all the way to the reality of death. Now, if God can do that, He can also turn your pain around. He can turn a distraught emotionality around. He can bring you back from slippage. He can satisfy curiosity. But you have to make your thoughts sacred and consecrate them and make them holy.

Let Me Introduce You
In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.
Genesis 1:1 (NIV)

This earth is a supernatural testimony. It's an irrefutable sign that there is but one God. The size, position, and angle of the earth is a scientific phenomenon. Even to this day, if we were but a few degrees closer to the sun, we would disintegrate and if we were a few degrees farther from the sun, we would freeze. The axis of the Earth is tilted at a perfect 23 degree angle. It's no mistake that it is, it allows equal global distribution to the ray of the sun making it possible for the entirety of the food chain on the earth to exist. What about the combination of nitrogen and oxygen in the atmosphere we breathe every day? Think about it for a moment. Every single day of your life, God makes sure that nitrogen and oxygen are mixed in the exact perfect combination. It doesn't happen on any other planet that way, but this one.

The moon controls the tides. It's like the hotel maid that cleans the oceans! Even the waves don't crash to the shore in vanity - the tides crashing to the shore drag impurities into the depths of the sea. It's almost like nature's constant recycling program!

It simply boggles the human mind to think that the stars will rotate with such exact precision. But it is true. It's as if we are all operating by an atomic clock that moves silently around the orbit.

The sun, the moon, the stars, all of these are like celestial evangelists above. They, in fact, circle the earth every 24 hours shouting in every language that there is a God. The heavens declare the glory of God and the earth shows forth his handiwork (Psalm 19:1). It's an eternal God who created heaven and earth, flung the stars in space and breathed into a handful of dirt until it became a human being. It's God who sits on the circle of the earth and measures the mountains in a scale and holds all seven seas in the palm of his hand. “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”

This is what it means: there was nothing before God. There was no one before God. The writers of the Book of Genesis wanted the Israelites who were fighting to emerge from simply being a nomadic tribal community until they could become a nation state society. The writers wanted them to understand the very foundation, the bedrock, the platform of their identity and their existence, and it was this: Israel - you didn't get here on your own. You were created by God.

Get this wrong and everything else is wrong. God needs not to prove anything to us. We are the direct result of the creative expression of God. And here's what it means: our lives in terms of significance, impact, worth and value is based upon the trust and confidence of our faith.

Something Is Going to Happen
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
John 1:1 (NIV)

In the beginning was the Word. You’ve heard those words before. Where have we heard them? In Genesis. “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”

John is building a bridge to introduce Christ, and the very first thing he says is, “Here’s how you interpret who Jesus is: In the beginning.” John unapologetically introduces Jesus as being the God of Genesis, and it’s this parallelism that sets the stage for John’s announcement. It’s as if John is saying, “Since you know God’s eternal presence, God’s reason, and God’s planning existed before anything was created, I want to tell you that Jesus is God revealing God’s self in a way to make God’s reasoning rational to you as a human.” 

Jesus is God. And in the confusing season when John was ministering, when it was considered forbidden to even mention the name of God because God’s name was holy, they would often refer to the actions of God by saying “the word of God,” which refers to an action rather than an idea or a person. God’s actions are His words and God’s words are His actions. That’s why it is believed that the Bible, the Word of God, is sharper than a two-edged sword—because it is action. It cuts between bone and marrow. Here’s what it means: when you engage the Word of God, something is going to happen.

When you believe in God as revealed in Jesus, you are sending a message to all who encounter you. That message is bold and clear. The active presence of God in your life is the explanation for why you walk the way you do. It explains why you cannot give up. It explains why you’re not married to a negative view of life. It explains why you believe that things work out for good. It explains why you know justice will roll down like a river and righteousness like a mighty stream—why love is preferable and that it covers a multitude of sins.

To say you follow Jesus and believe in Jesus is to boldly confess that you have surrendered to God’s actions as revealed in Jesus Christ.

The Comfort Has Come
But the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you.
John 14:26 (NIV)

I, you, us, we are not without guilt—all of us—but my Advocate has pleaded for me so that I am not getting what I deserve. And what is it that I deserve? Death for the wages of sin is what we all deserve. Instead, we are comforted by the knowledge of the grace and mercy that God has extended to us. The opportunities you are chasing in life are not based on you deserving them. The Advocate has pleaded for you to have a right to chase life more abundantly based upon the paid sacrifice of Jesus, whose blood was enough to atone for all of our sins.

God created us and gave us free will, knowing that it would cause us at times to make choices for the satisfaction of the flesh. So think of it like this: God set it up so that you would not have to stand before Him based on your guilt, receiving the wages of your sin. He sends Jesus to tell you that you don’t have to live as a slave to sin, and He proves it to us by taking on sin without sinning. He knows that even with that knowledge, we are going to sometimes choose the flesh over the spirit. So He sends the Advocate who stands as a reminder, in the place of our guilt, of the sacrifice of His Son, so that God is not revengeful or vindictive.

Jesus then introduces what will be the gifting of the Holy Spirit—not among you, but inside of you. This emphasizes the enduring nature of the Holy Spirit’s presence and the Holy Spirit’s guidance in the lives of believers. The Spirit moves in us all the time, in every believer, never having to divide His time. The Spirit’s movements include moving between temporal and eternal realms. You are connected to an eternal reality that you are existing in right now, which means you are in God’s presence as you always will be.

God wants to dispense grace to you. Therefore, He arranged things so that you could be the recipient of His grace that connects you to His eternal being.