Friday, March 25, 2016

Why Have You Forsake Me?

Yesterday was Maundy Thursday, which is the Thursday before Easter. It is the Thursday where many Christians around the world commemorate Christ's last night with His disciples and His suffering and death before the Sunday when we will celebrate His resurrection. At this time last year, I had the privilege of preaching at my church's Maundy Thursday service, and my text was Psalm 22. It might seem strange at first to use an Old Testament text to commemorate the suffering and death of Christ, but this text is a prophetic text--one that describes David's suffering in figurative terms which will be literal for Jesus. Here is a portion of the sermon:
It’s no accident, I think, that this psalm is followed by Ps. 23. It’s no accident that a psalm that expresses profound feelings of complete abandonment is follow by a psalm that emphasizes God’s presence even in the valley of the shadow of death. We can move from Ps. 22 straight into Ps. 23 because our Savior experienced the full punishment of hell that we deserved on the cross. Because He cried out “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” when we feel forsaken, we can pray with utter confidence “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me.” What is described in Ps. 22 may feel like what we go through sometimes in our lives, but the last movement of the cross of Christ shows us that it is only a feeling because it was real for Jesus. And, the very last bar of the third movement of this psalm—“he has done it”—points us to the fulfillment of the very last bar of the final, fourth movement that Jesus wrote: “It is finished.”
If you would like to hear the rest of the sermon, you can listen to it here or read the transcript here. I pray that on this Good Friday, the Holy Spirit will use it to magnify Christ in your heart and mind to the glory of God.

By His Grace,
Taylor

Monday, March 21, 2016

Resurrection Resources

This Sunday is Easter Sunday, which means there will be Easter egg hunts, pastel colors, special lunches and dinners, fuller churches, and lots, lots, lots of popular media articles trying to claim that the resurrection of Jesus never happened and possibly even saying something like "there is no historical evidence for it" or some thing like that. Well, since Paul says in 1 Co. 15:14, "If Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain," this is an important subject.

Well, to cut to the chase, the resurrection did happen, there is ample historical evidence for it, and there is good reason to believe in it. Now, since so much good stuff has been written on this subject, I do not feel the need to repeat that process. Instead, here is a short list of some great resources for defending the validity and historicity of the resurrection:
If you are a Christian, I hope these help boost your confidence in your Savior and standing before God in Him. If you are not a Christian, I pray these resources will challenge your preconceptions about the Bible and history and lead you to a saving faith in Christ.

By His Grace,
Taylor