Thursday, August 27, 2009

Lasting Impressions

I remember it as if it were yesterday. I was sitting in my third grade class at Eastside Elementary School when the principal came over the intercom and announced that President Kennedy had been shot. Our teacher turned on the radio, and we soon learned from a choked-up Walter Cronkite that Kennedy had died. For those who were old enough to remember that day, we all know where we were and what we were doing when we got the news that the President had been assassinated. That made a lasting impression on us.
I also remember when Martin Luther King met his death at an assassin's bullet at a hotel in Memphis. I remember when my parents woke me up gently on a Saturday morning I believe to tell me that Bobby Kennedy had been shot and killed the night before while campaigning in California. Those were lasting impressions.

O.J. Simpson dazzled football fans the nation over with his lightning-fast speed, quick moves, and numerous touchdowns as a running back in college and in the pro ranks. To this day, though, I can't remember one of them, because the lasting impression I have of O.J. Simpson has nothing to do with football, but with charges of murder, his Bronco ride get-away, and the sham of a trial where he was acquitted "because the glove did not fit."

The same can be said of Michael Jackson. I wish I could say that I chiefly remember that little boy-teenager-young man with his incredible singing voice and dance moves. However, the lasting impression for me of MJ has nothing to do with the songs he sang or the moon walk he created, but the continuous disfiguring of his face and the pedophile accusations that hovered over him.

The lion of the Senate has died, and the era of Camelot has come to an end. To this day, I don't remember much about the speeches that Teddy Kennedy gave, or the votes he made in the Senate, or all the political posturing he did. What comes to my mind first and foremost when I think of Senator Edward Kennedy is when I saw unfold on TV at the age of fifteen the news about his car accident that killed a female passenger of his. I remember his walking around with a neck brace, and I remember his trying to defend his strange actions after the accident. I asked myself then how can a person get away with what he did. We know the answer to that question. Chappaquiddick and Mary Jo Kopechne made more a lasting impression on me than anything else associated with Senator Kennedy.
We all have our lasting impressions, and they differ from person to person, but lasting impressions are real and forever etched in our memories.
For those who discount the notion that a born again, forgiven, redeemed child of God is always at all times securely kept by God's grace, then we have to assume according to this line of thought that God is not able to make a lasting impression on us. Other events and other people can do that to us, but omnipotent God is somehow unable to complete what He started, that our salvation which is here today can be gone tomorrow, and what God did when He saved us can be easily erased, forgotten and discarded. So much for lasting divine impressions!
I find this line of thought repulsive and a slap in the face of a sovereign God. Salvation is not ours to lose; it is His to keep. The perseverance of the saints (the "P" in the acronym TULIP) is as scriptural as the deity of Christ and the inerrancy of Scripture. I can see, though, how a person can believe that our salvation is tentative at best. If a person believes that salvation is somehow a joint effort between God and man, that man had a pivotal role to play in his getting in by the exercise of his unregenerate will, then it only follows that man's will can play a pivotal role in his getting out. God is less than sovereign at the beginning of our salvation, and He is less than sovereign during our salvation. It has consistency going for it, but foolish consistency has nothing going for it.
If God got us in, then God can and will keep us in. "Being confident of this very thing, that God who began a good work in us will complete it at the day of Jesus Christ." (Philippians 1:6) If we don't believe in God's sovereign grace in our salvation, his unconditional election of lost sinners, his regenerating power through the effectual call of God's Spirit, then we are left with no confidence at all. If we began a good work in us, then it won't be completed at the day of Jesus Christ. If it is possible for us to lose our salvation, then it is not possible, it is not even probable, it is certain that we all will lose it. I pity the poor soul who lives under constant dread because he thinks what he does today may determine his eternal destiny, instead of believing that our salvation is determined by what was predetermined before the foundation of the world.
We look unto Jesus, "the author and finisher of our faith." (Hebrews 12:2) The One who authored or gave us the faith to believe in the first place is the same One who will see us cross the finish line. God is sovereign all the way through. Now that's a lasting impression.
Jesus could not have made it any plainer when He said in John 6:37, "All that the Father has given to me (election) shall come to me (irresistible grace), and him that comes to Me I will in no way cast out (perseverance of the saints)." Two verses later Jesus would state it again, "And this is the Father's will who has sent Me, that of all He has given me (election) I should lose nothing, but raise it up again at the last day (perseverance of the saints)."
Now what is it about those two verses we can not understand?
My New Testament college professor put it wisely and succinctly, "When you see a falling star, you know it is not a star, because stars do not fall. Meteors do, but not stars." What about all those innumerable professing Christians that give no evidence of a changed life and seem to have fallen? What about all those "inactive" church members (a category unheard of in the New Testament)?
Could it be when we get away from teaching and preaching that salvation is solely the work of God, then we are more inclined to resort to means and measures where we play on people's emotions to squeeze a decision out of them, so the end result much of the time is not a convert of God, but a proud convert of ours? No wonder God has not made a lasting impression on many folks like that. If we begin a work in others, don't expect it to last. As Charles Spurgeon said, "We don't need to strike when the iron is hot. When God heats the iron, it will stay hot."
Scriptures teach the perseverance of the saints, and not the perseverance of the phony pretenders. Scriptures teach the perseverance of the sheep, and not the perseverance of the goats. Scriptures teach the perseverance of the wheat, and not the perseverance of the tares. Scriptures teach the perseverance of Jesus' friends, and not the perseverance of His enemies. Scriptures teach the perseverance of the children of light, and not the perseverance of the children of darkness.
Those who persevere in the faith are those whom God has preserved in His grace. And those who persevere in the faith are those who will "give all diligence to make their calling (irresistible grace) and election sure." (2 Peter 1:10) God's grace is not the excuse for laziness on our part; it is the best motivator and power behind all obedience. (Titus 2:11-14) Such was the theology behind John Newton's second verse to his most famous hymn.
Salvation from God is not hanging by a thread; it is forever secured by the One who was hanging on a tree on our behalf. His blood forgives us of all past sin, present sin and future sin. To say that our salvation is iffy from day to day is akin to saying that Jesus can forgive us of all past sin and present sin, but He is simply not up to it to forgiving us of all our future sin. Now that's a lasting depression!
"Now unto Him who is able to keep you from falling, and to present you faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding joy, to the only wise God our Savior be glory and majesty, dominion and power, both now and forever. Amen." (Jude 24-25)
I can say that there have been many events and people in history that have made a deep impression on me, but they are nothing compared to the eternal impression that God has made on my soul. This is why I am confident that He, the author and finisher of my faith, who began a good work in me will complete it at the day of Jesus Christ.
Kept by God's grace,
Chris




Saturday, August 22, 2009

Doing Personal World Missions Without Leaving Your Home

After the school year began in 1992, I got a phone call from a foreign exchange student organization that was sending out a desperate S.O.S. for a high school senior from Spain. As pastor of a church in that town, this organization's area representative wanted me to make an announcement at church to see if anyone in our church would like to be a host family for this boy that had recently come from Spain to study in our country for one school year. The boy had in just a few weeks had been shuffled to two different homes in our town, and neither home could be his permanent residence.

So I made the urgent appeal from the pulpit and in our church newsletter, and just like it is a good idea for pastors to listen to their own sermons from time to time, I began to listen to this announcement more closely. Long story short, Juan Luis Vega Jimenez came to live with our family, and we could not have been more delighted with God's providential workings for that entire school year. Juan became an integral part of our family, a big brother to our two very young girls at the time. We had such a pleasurable experience, that we decided to host another student the following year. This time we got a boy from Uzbekistan; Alisher (Alex) Abdaliev had a different personality than Juan, and he came from a totally different culture, to say the least. Still, we had again a memorable time that school year, and we made another friend for life. Alex was there at the birth of our third daughter.

Since my wife had three children at home, all pre-school age, we decided my wife needed a breather, so we did not opt for a third year in a row in hosting an international student. My father would die later that year anyway, so everything worked out well in our not hosting for a third consecutive year. We had all intention in hosting again, but other providential turn of events made it unfeasible for us to host again for the years to come.

We still have the most wonderful memories from those two years. I could tell story after story to illustrate that point, but I will keep it short. Juan came back to see us a few years later; he brought his fiance with him, so that he could get approval from his American parents. Juan is now in his mid 30s, married, with children. We kept in touch a lot, but with our move, Juan's move, different email addresses now, I have not communicated with him for awhile, but through a google search, I think I have been able to find him. So I plan on getting in touch with him by snail mail soon. Juan supposedly made a profession in Christ while he was with us, but I don't know to this day the genuineness of his profession. He came from a long line of Catholics, like nearly everyone in Spain, that he told me he would have a hard time in finding a non-Catholic church like ours in his home country, and still be in favor with his family.

As for Alex, his story had a very interesting turn. Alex came from a predominantly Muslim country, but Alex and his family were nothing. They had no religious affiliation of any kind. Alex became a part of our family, and as a result went to church with us. Again to save time, Alex during the last few months he was with us, stopped going to church, because as we found out, he was under heavy conviction from God. He told us he did not want to be saved, because he knew he would be all alone in his country. He did not know of any Christians in his home town. Of course, we respected Alex's wishes, but we kept praying for him.

Back in Uzbekistan, Alex took a Spanish class from a visiting professor from Panama, who was not only a Christian but very reformed in his theology. Alex was converted to Christ under this professor's influence, and he wrote back to me in an email in glowing terms of his testimony. He forgot at the time that he was to be not so open in his email communication, due to the fact that emails are screened over there. We have to write in coded language most of the time, especially when it comes to religious matters. He is married, has a family now, is teaching in a university somewhere in Central Asia, was involved in a prison ministry, and just two weeks ago I got another email from him.

When we were hosting Juan and Alex, it occurred to us we were doing personal world missions in the comfort of our own home. I have never been able to go on a mission trip yet in my life, and at one time in my life, I thought God was leading me into foreign missions. As it turned out, I went to Michigan and Ohio to do church planting, and from an Okie's perspective, that was very close to foreign missions. (I don't mean to offend Michiganders and Buckeyes.)

Most of us will never do foreign missions. We can pray for and financially support foreign missionaries; those are good things we should all do. We can go on a week-long mission trip overseas with our church or with some organization, but most Christians will not do that or can not do that for a variety of reasons, chiefly among them it can be quite expensive even for just one member of a family.

There has been a raging "discussion" for years if all of our short-term mission trips from our country to another country are really helpful in the long run. Some will describe them as "glorified vacation trips" for young people and adults. Considering finances alone, some will point out that the money a group from a church spends on doing a one-week mission trip could be better used in fully supporting a new missionary and his family on the field, who can be there year-round and not just for one week. Some missionaries have told me that in many cases the well-intentioned groups come with their Americanized methodologies that simply do not work in other cultures, and they have had to clean up some messes left behind by the visiting mission groups.

With that being said, and to be fair, good points can be made by the other side, because I know that these mission trips can be life-changing experiences for those who go, that missionaries can be greatly encouraged in the process, much spiritual good for all eternity can be accomplished, and God has used these short-term mission projects to confirm in the hearts of young and old alike that they need to enter the mission field on a full-time basis. So it is not my intention to come down on one side of this argument, but to use some of the points made to talk about the obvious advantages of doing personal world missions without even leaving your own home.

The Bible does say we are to take the gospel to every creature. We all have our Jerusalems, but there are Judeas, Samarias and the ends of the world out there. We can go to them; that is one way, and we have been pursuing that for 2000 years now. But what if God brings the Judeas, Samarias and the ends of the world to us? That has been happening in the United States for a very long time now. How many immigrants come to live here and eventually become U.S. citizens, and how many college students are there from other countries who come here for their education, either to stay here afterwards or to return to their home country after getting their degrees? Travel and communication--citing just two examples--have made this world a much smaller place, and it has brought the world to us.

I may never go to Spain in my lifetime, and if I do go, it will be for a very short time in all likelihood. Much more doubtful is my traveling to a place like Uzbekistan. But guess what? I know a young man in Uzbekistan, who lives there, grew up there, is from there, has more connections there than I ever would have, and is being a witness for Christ where I can not be a witness for Christ. And it was all because God made it possible for me, along with my entire family, to be involved in personal world missions for nine months, and not just for one week. Remember Jesus invested over three years of His life into a small group of men. Jesus was not a world traveler, but these men became that. If you can not become a world traveler, then all is not lost, because there is more than one way to skin a cat. God can bring the world to you.

Since I grew up as "cost analysis" type of child and teen (my mother would have phrased it differently, but we won't go into that) and due to my educational background in finance and business and jobs I held in those sectors, I am always looking for ways to get the best bang for my buck. I did the numbers, roughly speaking, and the cost of room and board for an international student in my home for nine months is an insignificant drop in the bucket compared to the cost of my entire family going on a mission trip to anywhere in the world for one week.

I know this has already become a lengthy article, but "finally, brethren" (Paul said that in Philippians 3:1 and he was only halfway through his letter, so hold on. . .) some years ago I became an area rep for OCEAN (Organization for Cultural Exchange Among Nations). I wanted to be an area representative way back when we had Juan and Alex, because I was fully convinced that this was a golden opportunity for a Christian family to be a witness for Christ and do world missions within their own four walls of their home. I get to match up students with potential host families.

OCEAN is such a wonderful organization with very high moral standards. Their process is very detailed and structured. All students must go through intense times of orientation in their home country and when they arrive here initially before they go to their respective host families. OCEAN will only accept top-notch students, academic-wise and in terms of character. They must pass a battery of tests, including English proficiency. They must have very good grades, they can not have any blemishes on their records in terms of behavioral misconduct, (they can not smoke, drink, do drugs or partake of any immoral or dangerous activities while they are here), they must come with numerous recommendations from teachers, principals, and other respected individuals who know them well. The parents who send their children here must pay a big sum of money for their student-child to partake of this American experience, so there is much financial incentive that nothing goes wrong while the student is here.

Some of the students who come here are already Christians, like the young man from South Korea, whom I helped place some years ago. Next week I will be traveling up to Tulsa because a 17-year old girl from Germany has just arrived, and I need to meet with the host family. Usually I interview the host family first before a student arrives, but there were special needs in this case. But this 17-year old from all accounts is not a Christian. From everything I have heard she is a very courteous, friendly, intelligent, sports-inclined, beautiful and helpful girl who on her bio put down she is open to "religion", but does not attend the Protestant church in Germany frequently. Her mother left her, her older sister and her dad a few years ago, and her dad is raising both her and her sister. It is a heart-breaking story, but here again is an opportunity for this host family and for me to sow the Word in the heart of a girl from a country we may never get to visit.

If the host family attends church regularly, then the international student will do as well, because for one thing, he or she wants to do everything the family does, and also because the student generally wants to experience as much as American culture as possible while here. If that means attending church, then he or she will definitely attend church.

The neat thing about my being a rep is that I get to choose who will be host families, which means I want only strong, consistent, loving Christian families to be host families for these incoming students. OCEAN does not believe in advertising for people to become host families; you can get a lot of takers doing something like that, but many of those kind of takers are not to be taken. A host family must undergo a background check, must be interviewed by the rep, must meet a lot of realistic standards, must come with good recommendations from others, must fill out necessary paperwork, etc. OCEAN is just as picky about host families as it is about students.

The host family provides room and board throughout the school year. The student's own family back home will provide money for all other expenses, so the costs are really minimal, but the rewards are maximum. The student does not need necessarily his or her own bedroom, just so long he or she has a separate bed. The student becomes part of the family for the school year. The host family gets to pick which student it wants from all the bios and paperwork we have on students coming in from everywhere. The host family can pick which student it wants based upon such things as country of origin, gender, age (all are high schoolers, though), interests, personality, family upbringing, religion, and other factors.

I know not everyone can be a host family for a number of reasons. Right now our family falls in that category ourselves. But there may be a lot out there that can host, if not this year (some students come in January and stay until the following December; most students come in August and stay through the following May), then maybe sometime soon in the near future. Maybe they have not considered this option or opportunity before with much thought. I have laid out the personal world missions angle, so perhaps God is calling some of you to be a foreign missionary in your own home. . .

For all those who live within a 100-mile radius of me, I am the area rep for OCEAN. I will be your go-to guy, and I will stay in constant contact with host families and all students. I see this as a joyful ministry on my part. For all those who live outside that radius, and even for those who don't but who want to check out things further, you can contact OCEAN, whose headquarters are in Tempe, Arizona, at 1-800-28-OCEAN or go to http://www.oceanintl.org/ for more information.

I don't sell Amway or Avon, but I am really sold on this, because I can't think of a better way to redeem the time and be involved in personal world missions, where God can bring the Judeas and Samarias and the ends of the world to our own personal Jerusalem.

Yours in Christ,
Chris

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Back to the Future, Forward to the Past

"History teaches us that man learns nothing from history."

"There is nothing new under the sun."


When the War of Independence ended, King George III of England signed a peace treaty with each individual state, named one by one in the document, and not with some obtrusive, consolidated entity called "the United States government."

Each state had accumulated an amount of war debt. Some states, like Virginia, were more responsible and diligent than others in paying off their debt, but other states, like northern Massachusetts, dragged their feet in paying off their debt. The first secretary of the treasury, Alexander Hamilton, proposed socializing or nationalizing the debt, which would force the more responsible states to foot the bill for the less responsible states.

Thomas Jefferson and James Madison opposed Hamilton's radical socialist attempt to disrupt the sovereignty of the individual states. They and others led Congress to defeat Hamilton's assumption plan five times, beginning in April 1790. Hamilton then used one last big bargaining chip. He and his supporters wanted the nation's capital to remain in New York City; Jefferson and Madison, being Virginians themselves, wanted the capital to be located along the Potomac River in Virginia. Hamilton went to dinner with Jefferson and offered to eliminate the political opposition to moving the capital to Virginia if, in return, Jefferson and Madison would marshal the congressional votes needed to get the assumption bill passed.

The deal was struck; the central government assumed the state war debts, and our nation's capital is Washington, D.C. today and not New York City. To secure the support of Pennsylvania's politicians, the national capital was located in Philadelphia for ten years. That dinner proved to be one of the most costly meals in U.S. history.

The national debt soared to a total of over $80 million. To service this debt, almost 80% of the annual expenditures of the government were required. During the period of 1790-1800, payment of the interest alone of the national debt consumed over 40% of the national tax revenue.

The Party of Hamilton used its power to make it illegal to criticize the Federalist-controlled government. With the Federalist John Adams in the White House, Congress passed a very controversial and notorious Alien & Sedition Act, which was written so that it would expire the day Adams left office. Journalists, ordinary citizens, and even a member of Congress, Matthew Lyons of Vermont, were imprisoned for merely criticizing the government. Those who spoke out against the ever-growing national government were slandered as un-Americans. A Rev. John Ogden simply carried a petition to Philadelphia for the release of Congressman Lyon, and he himself was imprisoned for doing so. Soon the citizens became fearful of the Federalist "reign of terror."

Jefferson and Madison were so incensed about the direction the infant country was taking, that they became authors of the Virginia and Kentucky Resolves of 1798. Both these states declared they had not intention of allowing the Sedition Act to be enforced within their boundaries. States rights triumph over the unconstitutionality of the expanding national government.

Congressman Lyon enjoyed sweet revenge in 1801 when, after being released from prison and reelected to Congress (while still in prison), he cast the decisive vote that made Thomas Jefferson President of the United States in an election that had been thrown into the hands of Congress.

Hamilton's political legacy is that his policies led to the disintegration of the Federalist Party. Heavy taxation, out-0f-control debt, a menacing standing army of tax collectors pre-IRS days, and the Federalist Party's attack on free speech led to the election of President Jefferson in 1800, and the eventual demise of the Federalist Party by the 1820s. While the party died, the party's big government, statist, socialist ideas lived on. The ideology came back with a vengeance under Abraham Lincoln's administration and under the New Deal program under FDR. On the eve of the depression in 1929, the unemployment rate was 3.2%. Eleven years later it soared to 14.6%.

Jefferson by 1807 had abolished all of Hamilton's excise taxes and had cut the government debt by almost 30%. Jefferson had adhered to the idea that the government could borrow for such reasons as financing a defensive war, but only if the current generation was taxed to service the debt.

With the exception of the War between the States and the Spanish-American War periods, the Jeffersonian view of government debt, which was also Adam Smith's view, prevailed into the twentieth century. In the 1930s, a British economist John Maynard Keynes took center stage worldwide. Keynes and his followers, the Keynesians, argued that fiscal irresponsibility on the part of the government was not subject to the same principles as that of individuals and families. The government could simply finance spending with borrowing, thereby pushing the payment of the debt to future generations. After 1964, during the Kennedy administration, the United States embarked on a course of fiscal irresponsibility matched by no other period in its two-century history.

Should we celebrate today because we have certainly learned from the failures of the past, that the ideas of an ever-expansionist national government of Hamilton and his cronies have been laid to rest, and that the mistaken notion of the Sedition Act to silence and villify the voice of the ordinary citizens would never surface in our nation again?

Back to the future, forward to the past.

"When the wicked rise, men hide themselves:
but when they perish, the righteous increase."
Proverbs 28:28


Wednesday, August 12, 2009

God's High Yield Investment Returns

God has too much invested in His people for Him to allow His investment to go belly up. He always gets great returns on His investment. How many mutual fund account managers can guarantee their clients an increase of "thirty fold, or sixty fold, or hundredfold" on their investments?

Back in 1992 when I joined the PC world, I was advised by a friend to join a religious chat room. This was in the Dark Ages way before Twitter and Facebook. I had no idea at first what he was talking about, but I took his suggestion, and I soon discovered that this chat room idea can be terribly addicting, time consuming and very unprofitable. I soon gave up the chat room excursion, but I did have some interesting "conversations", if you can call them that, with some people over some deep theological and doctrinal issues.

In almost every case, the talk eventually turned to what has been labeled as Calvinism vs. Arminianism. Either people were for the five points, or for some of the points, or for none of the points, and many times the back and forth volley got pretty heated among some chatters. I did find one civil person who I was able to talk to who was dead set against the five points of the doctrines of grace (TULIP), but when pressed, he admitted he did not know what to do with Romans 8:29-30, because the only possible way to understand those two verses was to accept the five points of total depravity, unconditional election, limited atonement (definite, successful atonement), irresistible grace and the perseverance of the saints.

Romans 8:28 is a promise that God gives only to those whom He has called irresistibly by His sovereign grace, but the thought does not end at verse 28, when many people quit the memorization at a place where God put a comma and not a period. To elaborate and further define who these called people are, God says they are the ones that God has foreknown, has predestined, has called, has justified, and has glorified. It is not that God knows ahead of time who will choose Him, because #1, God is the subject throughout the passage; God is the actor and initiator of everything regarding our salvation, #2 it is not what God has foreknown, but WHOM God has foreknown, predestined, called, etc., and #3 "known" in Scripture often means more than just mental knowledge about something, but it means a special love toward someone.

"Adam knew his wife, and she conceived and bore a son." (Gen. 4:1, also 4:17) Adam already had a head knowledge of His wife, but here it means nothing else but an intimate relationship with his wife. "Depart from Me, I never knew you." (Matt. 7:23) God knows everything about everyone, but He does not have a special love toward everyone alike. "You only have I known of all the families of the earth." (Amos 3:2) God mentally knows all the nations on the earth, but only one, Israel in the Old Testament, had His divine favor resting upon it.

Romans 8:29-30 has been called God's unbroken chain of salvation. He loses none of His investment along the way. The same group He has foreloved, He has predestined. The same group He has predestined (determine their destiny in advance), He has called. The same group He has called, He has justified. The same group He has justified, He has glorified. The crowd does not thin out along the way. Pretenders, hypocrites, empty professors, wolves in sheep clothing, and apostates will fall away, but they never were foreknown in the first place. (1 John 2:19) God will make sure that His Son will have His bride. The true predestined, called, justified Bride of Christ will not jilt her True Love, because the True Love will make sure He will not lose His costly investment.

To add further weight to this high yield return on God's eternal investment, notice that the future aspect in this unbroken chain is mentioned in the past tense. It is not "will be glorified", but "glorified", as if it has already happened. In God's eternal decree, it has already happened. God guarantees the final result, because He got the salvation ball rolling in the first place. Heaven is a done deal for those whom God has dealt a done salvation.

I count about eleven times in v. 31-39 that the word "us" or "we" is used. Who are the "we" or "us" in this context? We are already told their identity in v.28-30. It is not no one in particular and everyone in general, but it is the specified, particular group of the foreknown, predestined, called, justified and glorified. It can mean nobody else, or else the whole train of thought breaks down into confusing nonsense. Read those last nine verses in that chapter and every time you come across the word "us" or "we", just substitute the words "foreknown, predestined, called, justified, and glorified", and it all makes perfect sense. If one still is unsure, then v.33 should remove all doubt, "Who shall lay a charge against God's ELECT?"

God is for the foreloved, predestined, called, justified and glorified. (v.31)

God spared not His Son but delivered Him up for all of the foreloved, predestined, called, justified and glorified. (v.32)

Christ died and is risen, who is even at the right hand of God, who also makes intercession for all the foreloved, predestined, called, justified, and glorified. (v.34)

The investment picture on Wall Street can look pretty bleak at times. A commercial reminds us that some 401ks have become 201ks with our recent economic downturn. Read any mutual fund portfolio and they must inform you that past returns are not a guarantee for future returns, that these investments are not FDIC insured, and that you can lose money and your investment along the way.

Not so with God's investments. These instead are FDIC insured--Father Decreed In Christ.

If God were to lose some of His investments along the way, then how would God be any different than what this world has to offer? "And this is the Father's will which has sent Me, that of all which He has given Me (those foreloved, predestined, called, justified, glorified folks) I should lose nothing, but should raise it up again at the last day." (John 6:39)

God did not take a big gamble when He sent His Son to die on the cross. It was not a roll of the celestial dice. It was a perfectly planned out salvation investment design with a guaranteed outcome.

Instead of our railing against God's investment strategy, we should gratefully and humbly praise the Manager of our salvation account "who began that good work in us and will perform and perfect it until the day of Jesus Christ." (Phil. 1:6)

Now go back and read Romans 8:28 afresh with all this in mind. If God providentially decreed every aspect of your eternal salvation, don't you think He can manage all the lesser details of your life, even those things which may not make much sense now, and even those things that hurt like the dickens, so that the end result will be for your good in your life now, just like the end result of your salvation will be for your good throughout all eternity?

God will not lose out on His investment. You can bank on that.

Kept by God's investment,
Chris