Is This It?

Is This It? Have you found yourself thinking, "Is this it?" John 10:10 says Jesus came that we might have life and have it to the full.

*cough cough*
04/26/2022

*cough cough*

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
04/06/2022

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

🤣🤣🤣
03/22/2022

🤣🤣🤣

Nothing to do with the Bible but everything to do with our last video.
02/24/2022

Nothing to do with the Bible but everything to do with our last video.

Reply to what happened to Frodo???

No video tonight, Sarah lost her voice and we have to find it. In the mean time, here is something to think about until ...
12/13/2021

No video tonight, Sarah lost her voice and we have to find it. In the mean time, here is something to think about until we can meet again.

By Howard Thurman.

From Martin Man, Man Overboard
11/06/2021

From Martin Man, Man Overboard

Here is the info for my friend Alissa - again, her family is struggling to find a rental big enough for their family. Th...
11/03/2021

Here is the info for my friend Alissa - again, her family is struggling to find a rental big enough for their family. They've found a mobile home for $25,000 and need to raise money for it. Any help would be great, any sharing of this post would be helpful as well! And please pray that they meet their goal and their family gets taken care of!

09/13/2021

No video tonight, but some things to think about/discuss:

Leadership from a Biblical perspective, what do we do if we are asked to do or up hold or practice something that goes against our beliefs, spiritual or otherwise?

How are we to handle the authority of leadership if/when it is given to us?

What does it mean to "be the church," and how can we, as Christ followers, implement those things into making the church better?

07/02/2021

📖 Today I want to take you to one of the darkest passages in all of Scripture: Psalm 88.

In the Psalms, the Sons of Korah are known for their jubilant chants. Yet in Psalm 88, they sing something utterly dark. There is no relief within their stanzas and no triumphant resolve at the end.

Please read the entire Psalm, but I’ll include the final four verses below:

“From my youth I have suffered and been close to death;
I have borne your terrors and am in despair.
Your wrath has swept over me;
your terrors have destroyed me.
All day long they surround me like a flood;
they have completely engulfed me.
You have taken from me friend and neighbor—
darkness is my closest friend.”
(Psalm 88:15-18, NIV)

The words of Psalm 88 are so dark, so desperate, and so lacking in any perceivable hope that it almost takes your breath away.

That is, of course, depending on your definition of hope.

If your hope lies in experiencing pleasure, creating ideal circumstances, or in your ability to figure out how to solve life’s problems, then there is no hope in Psalm 88.

The hope of Psalm 88 is found precisely in the fact that it has no hope in it. It isn’t wrapped with some cute theological bow at the end. Instead, Psalm 88 is hopeful because of its stark honesty and profound darkness.

This Psalm confronts us with a blunt reality: being in a covenantal relationship with the Lord does not mean that I will escape the difficulties of life in a fallen world. As difficult as it is to accept, you are still here because this is where your all-wise and all-loving Heavenly Father wants you.

Our continued presence in this groaning place is not the failure of the plan; it is the plan. These experiences do not get in the way of what he is doing in and through you but are the means by which it gets done.

Psalm 88 reminds us that God is not after what we are after, or this Psalm would not be in the Bible. If God were exercising his awesome power to deliver personal satisfaction and pleasure to you, then Psalm 88 would be an embarrassing testament to his complete failure.

Psalm 88 also reminds me that the God in whom I hope really does understand the most profound suffering in life. He hears with patience and mercy the most desperate cries of the human heart. He never minimizes, mischaracterizes, misunderstands, or mocks my struggle.

Our Lord redeems the lost and the lonely, the rebel and the fearful, the confused and the doubtful, the sinner and the sufferer, the poor and the forsaken, the rejecter and the one rejected. There is no thought so distorted, no emotion so powerful, no circumstance so horrible, no action so twisted, and no desire so desperate as to be outside of the reach of the Redeemer and his grace.

Psalm 88 is in the Bible to remind us that the circle of God’s grace is big enough to contain every experience that this broken world could throw at us.

Now that is a reason for hope, even in the middle of a seemingly hopeless situation!

Address

Iowa Falls, IA

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Is This It? posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share