Friday’s Word

“An Evening With The Gospel” Concert

I’m giving a concert Saturday night, 6:00 p.m.

This Saturday—the 9th.

St. Matthew has two of the best singers around, our choir director and our “star soloist.”

They are in on most of the shows in our new concert series, but not this one.

It’s just me.

So, tell me again why I am doing this?

It’s a fundraiser to keep Friday’s Word going and to support our music program.

We consider this little box in the paper a kind of ministry. It’s a way to reach—well—you with a sane message about faith when there is so much nonsense around.

But it ain’t cheap.

That’s where our Second Saturday Concerts come in. We’ve had two, and they seem to be working.

But this one is just me.

Ol’ Max.

Or old Max. And can Old Max still sing?

Or could he ever?

I’m clearly not the one to answer that. But I have been doing something like it all my life.

As a teen, I almost had a career singing How Great Thou Art.

When the great Dr. Charles Allen came to our small town to preach, I was trotted out to sing—yes—How Great Thou Art.

I sang it at 17 funerals in a two-year period.

But in recent years, with great singers around, I haven’t done much solo work.

So, why am I doing this concert? Want the truth?

I love to sing. It’s a spiritual experience for me to bring a song to life.

The concert is called An Evening with the Gospel.

It lasts an hour. It’s free, as is the dinner after.

We will take an offering. Consider coming at 6:00, tomorrow night, Saturday the 9th, at St. Matthew.

Friday’s Word

SEPTEMBER — AT LAST!

No reason for most people to be aware (my book, Discovering God, is not out yet), but I do claim to know something about religious and near-death experiences.

I first met God through experience when I was 14 and have studied such encounters ever since.

I have had, throughout my life, a good deal of what William James called “business with God.”

No, I don’t know why.

I do know that these experiences are part of my call to ministry.

They help shape the message I proclaim in Jesus’ name. For the God I know through experience is the God I know in Christ.

And here is what I am always trying to tell you:

God is not silent.

God is accessible.

God is knowable.

Einstein said that “we know all that we know through experience.”

Note the “all.”

This includes God.

Everything in the Bible which is right about God is a product of experience.

Those first disciples experienced God through Jesus. Paul tells us he received the whole of the gospel he preached directly from an experience of the Risen Christ.

God is knowable.

Theology is not a matter of guesswork. It is not just opinion. It can be as accurate as math.

This is how we can know Jesus is right about God.

The God we meet in experience is the God we know through Christ—a God of unconditional love.

And this is how we know the author of the book of Revelation is wrong.

The vengeful God of Revelation does not exist.

How do I know?

Jesus—and experience– tell me so.

Friday’s Word

No, not the subject I promised last week. I want to talk about this: M.I.A. had a vision of Jesus.

M.I.A. (stage name) is a British rapper, with Tamil roots. I had never heard of her, but she is famous in younger circles.

She was Hindu, a great religion which proclaims some profound truths.

And she was happy with who she was. She disliked Christianity. She thought it was all foolishness.

But in 2017, she found herself alone in a place without phone access. She felt ill and was sure she was dying.

She said to herself, “This is it. I’m gone.” But suddenly she saw a vision of Jesus before her. And she saw in him immense strength, “the power to save the world.”

“This turned my world upside down,” she said. “I knew he was real. I had no question about it.”

She said, “Most of my fans were activists.”

“They hated Jesus. I knew I would lose a lot. But I had no choice. I could not deny what I now knew to be true.”

She didn’t record another album for five years—until 2023. She had to take stock of where she was. She declared herself a Christian.

This is the way it happens. You may raise endless arguments against Christian faith, but they will carry no weight with M.I.A.

She experienced Jesus.

She saw him.

And there are millions who can say the same thing—including me.

No, it is not necessary to have a profound religious event to believe in Jesus.

But we all need to face the evidence. Jesus is real and working in the world.

You can deny it.

But you can’t stop it.

It’s reality. And I want to live in the real world.

Friday’s Word

John Stoehr of Yale says that most evangelical preachers pay almost no attention to the Sermon on the Mount.

And many Christians don’t agree with the core of it.

Stoehr must be a smart guy. I’ve been saying the same thing for years.

I’ll talk about that next week. This week, I must talk about the concert at St. Matthew Saturday night.

Six o’clock. Dinner after.

Our concerts help support Friday’s Word and other aspects of our outreach.

They are important.

They are also free.

But we do pass that plate.

And we have a great time. (I promise.)

This concert is called Hymns and Sounds Like.

There are three hymns, but the other eight songs are the “sounds like”—pop songs that could be hymns with a couple of word changes.

Like, say, You’ve got a Friend. It has always reminded me of Jesus’ words on prayer.

And our great soloist, Shannon Davidson, will sing Dolly Parton’s I Will Always Love You. Dolly wrote it for someone who was very mad at her.

What about You Raise Me Up? I know—it’s a love song. But I think of Jesus every time.

Throw in a few great old hymns and we end up with a very spiritual and very uplifting evening.

I will sing, too. And tell a story. Four singers, all together.

These monthly concerts take a lot of work. I expect good attendance.

Don’t disappoint me.

Don’t make me have to call you or knock on your door. Just come and enjoy.

That’s Saturday, Aug. 19.

At 6:00.

Plan to stay and eat.

(Not live-streamed.)

Friday’s Word

Some scientists dismiss religion as myth and nonsense.

They may throw a sop to believers, saying religion is a whole other thing, unrelated to science. So, people can believe in God if it makes them feel good.

But science and religion both seek ultimate reality. And there can be only one ultimate reality, not one for science and one for religion.

If scientific truth and religious truth do not agree, one of them must be wrong. I would never believe a lie because it makes me feel good.

Let’s get real here.

Not only does God exist, God is the ultimate reality for both science and religion.

At the deep level of quantum physics, science and religion begin to merge. Quantum physics and religious experience are doorways to the same transcendent world.

Why is this?

As physicist Bernard Haisch puts it, “God has made all things from himself.” (Let that sink in.)

So, Paul could say, “In him we live and move and have our being.”

We are, then, one with God and one with one another.

And Jesus could say, “Whatever you do to the least of these, you do to me.”

He meant that literally.

Many Christians fear that science will one day discover something that will prove God does not exist.

But that’s impossible.

Every discovery in science takes us closer to God. It is non-believing scientists who need to fear.

The deeper they dig, the clearer God will become.

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Hey! One week away!

Another concert at 6:00 p.m., Saturday, Aug. 19.

Yes, I, too, will sing.