Enduring Patiently

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By Kendrick Gilli

“Since you have kept my command to endure patiently . . .” (Rev. 3:10)

                Do you remember these words from Pastor Brian’s message this last week? They really seemed to resound with me.

So how do we endure patiently? This life that we live here on earth is full of trials and tribulations, most of our own making, but how do we endure these things patiently? It is an ever-present struggle for us, and I am no exception. Some are small and happen to us and then fade away, but the larger trials may take days or months or even years, and they are ever present in our memories.

                Janna and I are just coming out of one of those long periods—almost two years. I have to admit that at times, I did become depressed for a little bit, but always Jesus was with us. He reminded me of all the times in my past when He had used trials to teach me something (there were a lot of those times) and showed me how I came out of them stronger than when I went in. It was these memories that helped me endure and helped me lead Janna and the rest of the family to endure, very patiently, and eventually turned this endurance to complete joy.

“See, I have placed before you an open door, that no one can shut.” (Rev. 3:8)

                No matter what happens in our lives, God has the door open. He is ready for us to walk through, but we are too often wallowing in the lies that Satan tells us. How often have you been depressed about your circumstances? Why? The Lord is always there, waiting for you to walk through that door that He has opened. Look back on your life! He has always brought you out of the valleys. Remove the veil of lies from Satan and see clearly the door that is open.

                This is not to say that trials will automatically disappear. Instead, when you see that light from the open door, you are able to endure those other trials and learn what God is trying to teach you. At this point, you are ready to be joyful, even while going through your trials. It is in these times that other people marvel at how you are handling the situation and how joyful you are, when, to the world, you should be sad and wallowing in self-pity. Blah!

                This is not Heaven. We will have trials and tribulations! The question is, How are we going to deal with these? Remember, “What He opens no one can shut” (Rev. 3:7).

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My Eighth Letter

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By Dan Amos

Around our house, one of the most common questions we ask each other is, “What do you have going today?” The default answer is something like, “I’ve got stuff to do, but nothing necessarily scheduled.” Are you busy, too? I come from a heritage of busy people. It’s what I do. So, when the elders looked at the membership covenant this month (you can find it attached to the Elim constitution), I had to reflect on whether my life is in line with it. Then, on Sunday, Steve had us all write an “Eighth Letter to Elim” in the manner of Revelation chapter 2.

The covenant, based on the examples in Scripture, calls us to be disciplined in regular practices of prayer, study, and worship. We’re to be doers of the Word, serving with our time, talents, and things. We are to come together regularly and encourage each other and build each other up.

In all of my busyness, I ask myself, Am I good busy or just busy?

So, my letter to Elim is a personal letter to me, and it calls out my busyness.

It comes from Jesus Christ, the Creator of all things. He is the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, who has existed through all time. He doesn’t just know time; He created it.

He is pleased with our welcoming nature and how we have learned to and practice extending grace. He is the God of second chances, and we are His people.

But He criticizes our busyness—too busy for Him—too busy for each other—too busy for the ones we welcome in.

So, be still. Listen. Be productive with good things. Come together and break bread together. Don’t live your life in solitary busyness.

Why? Because Jesus will be with us always and we can know the peace of being in His will. He will give all that we need to fulfill His purpose for us. Our busyness prevents realizing this.

I’m in my sixth decade of doing this life. (That means I’m in my fifties; count it on your fingers like I did if you don’t believe me.) I’m still learning and hopefully improving, but I know I need to keep working on the good-busy thing. My letter doesn’t speak for everyone, but it’s one that I could imagine getting in the mail.

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Modern-Day Laodiceans

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By Bill Naron

“Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked” Revelation 3:17.

            This text in Revelation clearly lays out for us that the lukewarm hearts of the Laodicean church caused them to lose sight of their need for the Lord. They were complacent in their faith. They had wealth and they had provision; therefore, they did not see that they had need for anything. Is this true of us at Elim? Is this true of you?

            As a believer, I am constantly battling against my own complacency. I like the way that John Piper puts it in the article “How to Fight Lukewarmness”: “Most of us in the prosperous West live in modern day Laodiceas (Revelation 3:14-22). Our faith is not endangered by persecution but by the constant temptations of worldly compromise.” Because of their wealth and riches, the Laodicean church became complacent in their faith and need of a Savior. It’s easy to forget our constant need for Jesus when virtually every need—and, at times, every want—is met with supply.

            Take the Garden of Eden for example. God provided every want and need for Adam and Eve. In return, they were asked to be good stewards of what God had given them. However, when the serpent came in all of his tempting ways, Adam’s heart, previously content with all he had been given, turned to a heart of complacency when he stood by and watched Eve, his helpmate, eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Adam’s complacency is tied into the first sin recorded in the Bible.

            This sin robbed Adam and Eve of all the blessings and good God had in store for them. All because Adam became complacent. How much easier is it in this modern world to stand by, like Adam, and watch as our blessings from the Lord are robbed from us and the good that we are called to do slips away because of our own complacency? This week, I challenge myself and my church family to reexamine our lives and Identify areas of complacency and weed them out. Then as a church, we can move forward in the good works that Christ has called us to.

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How Important Is Hope?

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by Larry Short

World Vision friends and colleagues Brian Sytsma (left) and Rob Moll. Rob was killed last month in a climbing accident on Mt. Rainier. Photo courtesy Brian's Facebook page.
Two World Vision colleagues and friends hiking: Brian Sytsma (left) and Rob Moll (right). Rob was killed in a hiking accident on Mt. Rainier last month. Photo courtesy Brian’s Facebook page.

Last week I learned that someone I loved and respected at World Vision, looked up to as a mentor and considered a friend who had been very kind to me, died very suddenly and unexpectedly on Mt. Rainier.

Rob Moll was an editor at Christianity Today for many years, before coming to World Vision and taking a job (as writer for the president) that I had applied for. I was vaguely annoyed, of course, even though I recognized he was far more qualified than I was — an amazing writer and editor who had published several brilliant books.

But my annoyance faded quickly as I got to know Rob. He was a riveting presenter at chapels, and his intense curiosity, scientific interest, and passionate love for Jesus made it hard to stay annoyed. The last time we met was an informal lunch at World Vision’s U.S. headquarters, where I sought and received from him some good advice on how to get my novel professionally reviewed.

Rob left World Vision shortly thereafter for a job in Boston, but retained some good friends here, and came back here last month to climb Mt. Rainier with one of them, a colleague and friend named Brian. They were climbing an escarpment when Rob lost his footing and fell 100 feet. Brian descended quickly to find him unresponsive, and by the time the helicopter arrived, he had passed into the presence of Jesus.

One of Rob’s books is titled: The Art of Dying: Living Fully Into the Life to Come.

Rob was only 41. He had a wife and four children. His funeral is Friday afternoon. (Please let me know if anyone would like to go with me.)

Rob’s passing was the second brush with grief I’d had in the past few months. I struggled when I learned earlier this year that Pastor Martin and Kim were moving on. Martin is a good friend and mentor and one of the key reasons Darlene and I fell in love with this church and have enjoyed being a part of this body for the past 20 years or so.

And of course I’ve also lost my mom and dad, both sets of grandparents, other aunts and uncles, and many other friends, many of them here at Elim. I don’t think it’s possible to experience living until you are in your 60s without the shared experience of loss and grief.

What buoys us up in the midst of such loss? What sustains us and helps us to keep going? It’s hope.

Hope tells me that Rob and I will have lunch once again. It tells me that I will be joyfully reunited with my parents and other lost loved ones, and that we will together explore the hills of heaven and enjoy a deeper and more personal knowledge of our Savior when we do.

Hope also reassures me that God knows what he is doing in a church which experiences the loss of a pastor and friend like Martin!

Hope is not wistful or wishful thinking, like our culture sometimes thinks it is: “Wow, I really hope that happens ….” No, it’s something completely different. Hebrews 11:1 assures us: “Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” So hope is all tied up in this package with faith and conviction. It’s something you believe, because the God who is faithful and who keeps His promises says that it is so.

And it has occurred to me more than once, and more vividly recently, that if we can trust God to reunite us with our loved ones, if we can trust Him when He promises life eternal, we can also trust Him when He plainly tells us other things. In one sense, smaller things … things like: “Do not fear” (which he repeats over and over again in Scripture), or promises of His presence with us now, or of His imminent return, or promises that if we ask for the good gift of the Holy Spirit, He will grant that Gift.

While the pain of loss and grief diminishes over time, I don’t think it ever disappears completely in this life. But the promise of hope tells us there is a life coming when Christ will “wipe every tear from our eyes” (Rev. 7:17 and 21:4). Loss will then be a distant and powerless memory, when we are confronted with the reality of the coming Kingdom, eternal life, and the King in all His glory!

I’ve been thinking about and working on the challenge Pastor Steve shared Sunday: What letter might Christ write to us, just as He wrote to the seven churches in Asia Minor through John? Part of that assignment is, what might Christ commend in our church? For me, I think the answer is that Elim is a place that has, for me, nourished hope. We are excitedly and expectantly, together, looking forward to that day when He will wipe away our tears!

P.S.: Go here if you’d like to contribute to a special memorial campaign for a project that was near and dear to Rob’s heart, life-saving clean water in Malawi. Or click for the Gofundme page set up to help Rob’s family.

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Church Cardiology

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by Pastor Steve McCoy

Abdu Murray is a Christian speaker who works with Ravi Zacharias International Ministries. He speaks about Christianity on various college campuses.

At one major university, a member of the audience took the microphone during the Q and A time, posing an interesting question. He prefaced the question with his backstory: “I am a software engineer. Once we’ve designed the software, we test it for things that bug us about it. Not just glitches, but things about the software we personally don’t like. If you were to do the same test on the church, what would bug you about it?”

The audience nervously laughed as they eagerly awaited Abdu’s answer.

How would you answer that question?

What bugs you about the church?

What bugs you about our own church, Elim EFC?

What needs to be fixed? What needs to be left the same?

During August, I am going to give a sermon series called Church Cardiology: Strengthening the Heart of Our Church. We will be dialing down on Revelation 1–3.

In chapters 2–3, John the Apostle writes seven letters to seven churches throughout Asia Minor, modern-day Turkey. In these letters, Jesus attempts to debug seven church situations.

Interestingly enough, we find Jesus evaluating these seven churches. He addressed them as unique congregations with unique gifts, skills, contexts and opportunities. He doesn’t expect them to conform to a cookie-cutter template; His goal is to help them be the best church Jesus created them to be.

Jesus wants us to evaluate ourselves so we can be the best Elim can be.

Join us this August as we listen to the Chief Cardiologist debug our church.

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