Month: July 2016

KK workshop2016

We cordially invite you to join us to feast on God’s Word together. This workshop consists of sample sermons preached, lectures and interaction. The emphasis is on expository preaching. Participants will go away from the workshop with a model on how one might do inductive Bible study and preach expository sermons. It will be beneficial for new and old preachers…

God wants to rescue all men and women!

How do you set your priorities? Today on Discover the Word, the team talks about why we should make it our priority to show the world God’s graciousness, His favor, and His love. It’s the same reason proclaimed in Psalm 67 . . . so that the world would know that God wants to rescue all […]

He Understands

Some young children have trouble falling asleep at night. While there may be many reasons for this, my daughter explained one of them as I turned to leave her bedroom one evening. “I’m afraid of the dark,” she said. I tried to relieve her fear, but I left a nightlight on so she could be sure that her room was monster-free.

I didn’t think much more about my daughter’s fear until a few weeks later when my husband went on an overnight business trip. After I settled into bed, the dark seemed to press in around me. I heard a tiny…

“Grace, grace, God’s grace…grace that is greater than all our sin!” is part of the refrain from the song, Grace Greater Than Our Sin, by Don Moen. That lyric is a byline for my life. Even when I was still in my sin (Rom. 5:8), He chose me and saved me (Eph. 1:4-5).
I was fearless as a child, so my first brush with death came at around two. I was running like the wind down a steep hill of a cemetery while my parents put flowers on nearby graves. Tripping on the trunk of a small tree, reeling out of control, I landed hard and was later diagnosed with a broken femur. Next around four, I ventured into the river while my dad swam across the river, he looked back to see my long brown hair floating on the top of the water. I climbed on roofs, jumped off high places, and ended up covered head to toe with poison oak after one summer adventure. Those were innocent times.
At eleven my sixteen-year-old brother died in a sudden vehicle accident colliding with a train. The police reported the news to me (I looked much older than my years). His death was followed by my grandmother’s sudden death from cancer and my 46 year old uncle’s sudden death from a heart attack leaving my six cousins all under the age of 18 to figure out life without a provider or protector. I decided at a young age that if I was going to die young, I might as well make the “best” of it while I could. Was it a conscious decision? I do not believe it was, but when added to my fearlessness nature, the combination lit a fire of rebellion that lasted the next thirteen years.
From age 12 to 25, many of my choices were foolish and dangerous. At 17, I came near to death again from Toxic Shock, surviving a 107-degree fever and other awful and painful symptoms. After 30 days of recovery, I got out of my house for the first time, only to be rear-ended by another vehicle, the force so powerful it bent the metal frame of my 1968 Mustang. While my daily life was colorful and full of friends, family, and school activities, my nights and weekends were often filled with edgy, darker activities.
I went to college with the help of my parents and student loans. I continued my sinful decisions and what had now become defiance toward God. I met a young man who knew God, but was not walking with Him. He tried to tell me about God and the devil, but his life was total hypocrisy to me, which was the only loophole I needed to push God even farther away.
Fast forward four years, I was living in another town and working at a small vitamin store, barely getting by. My coworkers were a witch (she said she was a white witch, the “good kind”), a prostitute, and a Christian (although I did not know she was a Christian at the time). The Christian woman was kind and hard working. She had a peace about her that I was attracted to and needed desperately in my life. Finally, amongst the strange environment (we were having break-ins at night), I asked the woman, “Do you go to church or something?” She replied, “Yes, would you like to go with me sometime?” I was in such a hopeless place and knew the only thing I hadn’t tried was God, so why not? Much happened in between, even a miracle that to this day I can’t explain, except that it was God. But after going to church with this woman less than a year, she asked me if I wanted to pray to have Jesus come into my life and by then I knew He really was the only way, the only truth, and the only life (John 14:6).
After years of looking in the rearview mirror, to see if my decisions would either literally or figuratively catch up with me, I felt freedom from my past. God’s grace, His unmerited, undeserved favor had caught up with me instead. I no longer look back, but rather forward to what God has in store for my future as His child, saved only by grace.

His face shines upon us . . . and not just for our good

“Us four and no more and close the door!” Ever heard that expression? It means, “Lord, bless our little group,  because that’s all I’m concerned about!” But that’s not how God operates. Today on Discover the Word, our team continues their discussion on Psalm 67, showing us that God causes His face to shine upon […]

Marking Time

The military command, “Mark Time, March” means to march in place without moving forward.  It is an active pause in forward motion while remaining mentally prepared and expectantly waiting the next command

            In everyday language, the term marking time has come to mean “motion without progress, not getting anywhere, not doing anything important while you wait.” It conveys a feeling of idle, meaningless waiting.

            In contrast, the word wait in the Bible often means “to look eagerly for, to hope, and to expect.” The psalmist, when facing great difficulties, wrote: “O my God, I trust in You; let me not be ashamed;…

Bringing all nations into relationship with God

“Good morning, Mr. Phelps. Your mission, if you choose to accept, is to . . .” Once a Mission Impossible fan hears those words, they know they’re in for some excitement—in some part of the world. Today on Discover the Word, the team uncovers a tremendously important mission. It’s found in Psalm 67 and the purpose […]

Misplaced Trust

I like watching birds, an activity I developed while growing up in a forest village in Ghana where there were many different species of birds. In the city suburb where I now live, I recently observed the behavior of some crows that interested me. Flying toward a tree that had shed most of its leaves, the crows decided to take a rest. But instead of settling on the sturdy branches, they lighted on the dry and weak limbs that quickly gave way. They flapped their way out of danger—only to repeat the useless effort. Apparently their bird-sense didn’t tell them…

An Open Hand

In 1891, Biddy Mason was laid to rest in an unmarked grave in Los Angeles. That wasn’t unusual for a woman born into slavery, but it was remarkable for someone as accomplished as Biddy. After winning her freedom in a court battle in 1856, she combined her nursing skills with wise business decisions to make a small fortune. As she observed the plight of immigrants and prisoners, she reached out to them, investing in charity so frequently that people began lining up at her house for help. In 1872, just sixteen years out of slavery, she and her son-in-law financed…

The Gift and the Giver

It’s only a keychain. Five little blocks held together by a shoelace. My daughter gave it to me years ago when she was 7. Today the lace is frayed and the blocks are chipped, but they spell a message that never grows old: “I ♥ DAD.”

         The most precious gifts are determined not by what went into them, but by who they are from. Ask any parent who ever received a bouquet of dandelions from a chubby hand. The best gifts are valued not in money but in love.

         Zechariah understood that. We hear it in his prophetic song as he praised…

During times of transition will you trust God?

During times of transition we’re all enrolled in Trust School. The question is, will we barely pass, fail completely, or graduate with honors? Today on Discover the Word, our team, along with pastor and author Jeff Manion, concludes their series called “The Land Between.” When life is turned upside down, God wants to know, “Will […]

Unexpected

In the midday heat of summer, while traveling in the American South, my wife and I stopped for ice cream. On the wall behind the counter we saw a sign reading, “Absolutely No Snowmobiling.” The humor worked because it was so unexpected.

            Sometimes saying the unexpected has the most effect. Think of this in regard to a statement by Jesus: “Whoever finds their life will lose it, and whoever loses their life for my sake will find it” (Matt. 10:39). In a kingdom where the King is a servant (Mark 10:45), losing your life becomes the only way to find…

Opening of ODB KK Resource centre

 

Opening of Our Daily Bread Ministries Kota Kinabalu Resource Centre

Date: Saturday, 6th August
Time: 11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Venue: Sabah Theological Seminary
(Tingkat 2, Bangunan Pentadbiran, 26, Jalan Pinggir, Off Jalan Istana, 88400 Kota Kinabalu, Sabah.)

Program Highlights

  1. Christian devotions, discipleship materials in various languages and also other resources for children and adults.
  2. Sales of books by Discovery House Distributors (sister company of Our…

I can remember a specific time when God used the daily devotional in “Our Daily Bread” to speak directly to me, giving me direction to get something done. It was a time in my life where I was going through a lot of changes. I was 32, had gone through a divorce about 8 months prior, and my work situation was starting to change. I was moving out from computer programming more into writing, having just finished writing up a manual for a computer project. I was working for a government research site in Idaho Falls, Idaho. Over Christmas, I visited my relatives in Waco, Texas. While there, one of my cousins handed me a college bulletin to Baylor University, which is in Waco, and asked me to send it to my sister because she had been asking for one. Out of curiosity, I opened the bulletin and browsed through the pages looking at the different programs. All of a sudden, my eyes lit upon a degree program called a “Master’s degree in International Journalism.” I reviewed through the requirements for the program, and began to get excited with what I was reading. I love to travel, and one of the requirements was to go on an internship to a foreign country for 6 months. And the idea of writing news stories as a career also excited me. I drove over to Baylor to visit the campus and just walked around, familiarizing myself with it. I would have tried to see a department head about the program, but it was Christmas break and no one was around. While walking around and exploring the campus, I became aware of God’s affirmation on me that this was the right thing to do. Somehow I just knew deep in my spirit that this was a new direction the Lord was leading me toward.
I returned to Idaho all excited about this new direction. However, upon my arrival back home, I was faced with a pile of mail to go through and errands to do that had accumulated while I was away on Christmas break. I temporarily shelved the university idea to tackle my “to do” pile.
Shortly thereafter, one particular morning, God spoke to me rather strongly. Nearly every morning for decades now, I have always started my day with reading the “Our Daily Break” devotional to get in tune with God and to start my day right. That morning, the particular scripture reading was Matthew 21:28-31 about a man who had two sons. I’ll just quote it (Jesus speaking, NASB version):
“But what do you think? A man had two sons, and he came to the first and said, ‘Son, go work today in the vineyard.’ And he answered, ‘I will not’; but afterward he regretted it and went. The man came to the second and said the same thing; and he answered, ‘I will, sir’; but he did not go. Which of the two did the will of his father?” They said, “The first.”
After reading that scripture, I then read what the author of the devotional had to say. He basically said that if God is telling us to do something, we need to act on it promptly and get it done, not say we’re going to do it and then not do it.
It was a mild rebuke to me. I knew that I identified with the second son who said he would go but then did not do it. So I repented, put aside my “to do” list, and started checking into what I needed to do to apply to Baylor University. As it turned out, I needed all that time (starting in January) to get ready for the fall semester of that year. I had a GRE exam to take, lots of paperwork to fill out and send off, transcripts to send, phone calls to the university to make, etc. By listening to the Lord and moving quickly at His direction, I was eagerly ready for college that fall semester, for attending Baylor to get a Master’s degree in International Journalism, a field of study that seemed like a dream come true for me.

“Whom the Lord loves He chastens”

“Whom the Lord loves He chastens.” We read that in the Bible, but what does that mean exactly? Today on Discover the Word, our team, and Pastor Jeff Manion, discusses the uncomfortable topic of when God is a disciplinarian. Discover the relationship between rescue and discipline by being part of the study today on Discover the Word.