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Encouraging Words (Colossians 1:1-8)

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A couple of the churches I served presented me a wonderful gift for Pastors’ Appreciation Month. They both gave me a collection of notes written by members of the congregation. Each of these letters told of ways that I touched their lives and expressed appreciation for my presence and my work. The encouraging words in these letters have been such a blessing that I still look at them from time to time. Today’s reading works the other way around. This is a letter from Paul and Timothy to the people of the church in Colossae. Paul writes, “In our prayers for you we always thank God… for we have heard of your faith in Christ Jesus and of the love that you have for all the saints, because of the hope laid up for you in heaven” (vv. 3-5). Notice how faith, love, and hope are woven together. Paul hadn’t planted this church himself (Epaphras did). He had simply heard about them, and what he heard moved him to gratitude. Their faith was already bearing fruit, and word was getting around. Pau...

Holy Tuesday: Truth Confronts Hypocrisy

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It is the Tuesday of Holy Week, and Jesus has returned to the temple in Jerusalem.  Just the day before, he turned over the tables of the money changers. Now, the chief priests and elders are waiting for him. “By what authority are you doing these things,” they demand, “and who gave you this authority?” (Matthew 21:23). They are not asking because they want to learn. They are asking because they want to trap him, to discredit him, to silence him. And Jesus — with the kind of calm that only comes from knowing exactly who you are — turns the question back on them. [Today’s text – Matthew 21:23–27; 23:1–12 ] What we see here is a reckoning. Jesus sparred with the Pharisees, the elders, and the scribes — and in each exchange he revealed something about the nature of true spiritual authority. Authority, he showed them, doesn’t come from titles or positions or public performances of piety. It comes from alignment with God, from a life lived in genuine love and truth. Then Jesus say...

Thoughts Upon Methodism, Rev. John Wesley

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Thoughts Upon Methodism, Rev. John Wesley 1.  I am not afraid that the people called Methodists should ever cease to exist either in Europe or America.  But I am afraid, lest they should only exist as a dead sect, having the form of religion without the power.  And this undoubtedly will be the case, unless they hold fast both the doctrine, spirit, and discipline with which they first set out. 2.  What was their fundamental doctrine?  That the Bible is the whole and sole rule both of Christian faith and practice.  Hence they learned,      (1)  That religion is an inward principle; that it is no other than the mind that was in Christ; or, in other words, the renewal of the soul after the image of God, in righteousness and true holiness.      (2)  That this can never be wrought in us, but by the power of the Holy Ghost.      (3)  That we receive this, and every other blessing, me...

The Origin and Use of John Wesley’s 22 Questions for Self‑Examination

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When John Wesley gathered the first Methodist societies in the 1730s and 1740s, he wasn’t trying to start a new denomination. He was trying to form a people who took the gospel seriously enough to let it reshape their daily lives. Wesley believed that God’s grace is always moving—awakening, justifying, sanctifying—and that Christians grow best when they pay attention to how grace is at work within them. One of the most practical tools Wesley used for this spiritual formation was a set of self-examination questions. These questions did not appear in a single moment but grew out of the early Methodist “bands,” small groups of three to five people who met weekly for honest confession, encouragement, and accountability. The goal was not guilt but growth. Wesley wanted believers to cultivate a life that was awake to God, honest about sin, and open to the transforming work of the Spirit. The “22 Questions” were compiled for these band meetings and reflect Wesley’s deep conviction that ho...