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As The Seasons Change

By Don Loftis | 11.02.11

Beyond a doubt, fall has arrived!  The cool nights, the falling of colorful leaves, and the end of the baseball season all confirm such.  As further proof, this weekend we will move our clocks back an hour and start our evening worship services at 5:00. Which of the four seasons do you like the best?  Each one of them has something beautiful to offer.  Spring offers a period of rebirth, as green leaves and grass replace the dead brown of winter.  Summer is a season of gardens, flowers, patios, and vacations.  Fall brings colorful trees and football homecomings.  Even winter offers snow days from school and some of our favorite holidays. I would remind all of us that life is the same way.  Every “season” of our lives offers some unique blessing.  The early years [...]

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Becoming Like Children

By Don Loftis | 10.19.11

As you look around Sunday, you will notice that we have some of the most precious children in all the world.  Their smiles are contagious and their hugs will melt your heart.  Jesus must have had a similar thought when he told his competitive disciples, “Truly I say to you, unless you are converted and become like children, you shall not enter the kingdom of heaven. Whoever then humbles himself as this child, he is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven” (Mt. 18:3-4). Jesus was highlighting childlike humility as essential to our obedience and our willingness to accept divine grace.  Children also forgive the hurts of others more easily than their parents. Paul highlights the innocence of children writing in I Cor. 14:20, “Brethren, do not be children in your thinking; yet in evil [...]

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It Really Is Black Or White

By Don Loftis | 10.12.11

As John introduces the message of his first epistle (I John 1:5), he writes, “This is the message we have heard from Him and announce to you, God is Light, and in Him there is no darkness at all.”  In a moral context, the Scriptures present light to be good and darkness to be evil.  This contrast is true at all times and in all circumstances. However, our society wants to live in the “gray areas.”  We often hear of choosing “the lesser of two evils” or living in “changing times.”  Right and wrong are interpreted situationally and individually. We may be limited in our own insight and judgment.  We may even be blinded by our own desires.  Yet, these personal deficiencies never alter right and wrong.  Profanity is always wrong, as is sexual immorality.  [...]

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Preaching To An Audience Of One

By Don Loftis | 10.05.11

  Those of us who preach typically look forward to having a large audience present to hear us.  We would relish an opportunity to join Paul in preaching to the Stoics and Epicureans at the Areopagus in Athens.  We would love to have a television ministry where hundreds of thousands of people heard our well planned and powerfully delivered lessons. However, Romans 2:21-22 raises a different issue.  There Paul warns the Jews about an ever present danger with these words: “You, therefore, who teach another, do you not teach yourself? You who preach that one should not steal, do you steal?  You who say that one should not commit adultery, do you commit adultery? You who abhor idols, do you rob temples?” Before the Sunday morning sermon is delivered, it needs to have already been [...]

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Go Your Way

By Mark Adams | 09.28.11

The first half of the book of Daniel is a powerful narrative about a young man who managed to stay faithful to God in a hard set of circumstances. But the second half of Daniel–his visions–is a lot weirder, and harder to comprehend. God reveals to Daniel much of what would be occurring on a grand scale; more than 1,000 years of human history, with one empire turning over another, and all of this leading to a “son of man” who was given dominion over the entire world (Daniel 7:13-14). After numerous visions, Daniel finally spoke up and asked a heavenly messenger, “What shall be the outcome of these things?” (Daniel 12:8) Instead of receiving an explanation, Daniel was told twice, “Go your way, Daniel.” (Daniel 12:9,13) As much as we might ponder the future [...]

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Getting It Right

By Don Loftis | 09.14.11

  When Jesus said, “But seek first His kingdom and His righteousness” (Mt. 6:33), He was certainly establishing a sense of priority.  Our financial budgets and time management skills should reflect that value system.  Nothing should come before the Lord! However, Jesus was also suggesting that our religion is a passion.  We seek the Lord’s rule in our lives with great interest and energy.  Jesus calls on His disciples to “hunger and thirst after righteousness” (Mt. 5:6) and to “strive to enter through the narrow door” (Lk. 13:24).  Paul adds that he pressed on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus (Phil. 3:14). John Piper, a noted preacher of today, was asked why he did not watch television.  He responded with two observations.  First, he desired to [...]

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A Trait Of Great Leadership

By Don Loftis | 08.24.11

We have all been around people who brag a great deal about their skills and accomplishments.  Somehow, they put themselves at the center of every group accomplishment.  Chances are that you find these folks annoying and hard to work with.  Jim Collins, noted management guru, would agree. In studying America’s eleven most successful businesses over the past fifteen years, he discovered one of the trademarks for success was an humble CEO.  He notes, “When truly successful CEO’s do something right, they walk you over to a window and point to all the reasons (especially people) ‘out there’ contributing to their success.  When they do something wrong, they walk to a mirror and assume the blame themselves.” The Scriptures underscore the value of humility.  In the Sermon on the Mount Jesus said, “Blessed are the poor [...]

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What Are You Looking Forward To?

By Don Loftis | 08.17.11

I have always said that half of the fun of a vacation is looking forward to going.  The anticipation of taking a trip or having the family come for a visit may surpass the event itself.  Even a night out with our spouse is made more enjoy-able by thinking about it for several days in advance. The Scriptures certainly affirm the value of high expectations.  The psalmist (119:147-148) says, “I rise before dawn and cry for help; I wait for Thy words. My eyes anticipate the night watches, that I may meditate on Thy word.”  A few chapters later he adds (122:1),  “I Was glad when they said to me, ‘Let us go to the house of the LORD.’”  We should look forward to our worship assemblies as well as those private moments of spiritual [...]

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Life’s Journey, Where Are You?

By Don Loftis | 08.03.11

John Bunyan’s classical allegory of the Christian life was entitled Pilgrim’s Progress. It has been translated into over 200 languages and has never gone out of print in the 325 years since it was first published. Its popularity lies in its universal application. Who can’t identify with visits to such “places” as the Hill of Difficulty, the Delectable Mountains, the Valley of Humiliation, or the Slough of Despond? We are all on the same journey–just at different places. It really does not matter where we are on that journey. You might object to that statement, if you are in a period of severe pain or desperate loneliness. However, since we all travel similar roads, we will all encounter those painful stages. In fact, John Bunyan started writing Pilgrim’s Progress in 1660 while he was in [...]

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Dealing With The Annoyances Of Life

By Don Loftis | 07.27.11

There we were taking in the beauty of Capital Reef National Park in southern Utah. Pam and I had driven two miles off the main park road and walked even farther down a gorge. We crawled back into a “cave-like formation” on a lower level of a 200’ high rock wall, and we marvelled at God’s creativity. There was no one around; there was no noise except the wind. We allowed ourselves time to pray and meditate in this wonderful place. Then it happened — a “noseeum” showed up. This is the name that Utah residents use to identify an insect that resembles a Tennessee mosquito. This noseeum annoyingly buzzed around our heads and bit our arms. Its presence destroyed “the serene moment” we had just begun to enjoy. It didn’t seem fair. Life is [...]

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