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The Bartimaeus Blog 2020.33

Bartimaeus Baptist Temple Posted on August 21, 2020 by LarryAugust 21, 2020

Hello friends and family.  My prayer this week is that we never miss an opportunity to share the good news of Jesus with someone who needs to hear it.  Here’s the scoop on happenings at BBT.

Keep Tim in your prayers.  The latest from Cindy is that he is back at Parkland this afternoon for more tests.  I saw him on Wednesday and he was interacting with us but was in bed.  Ruth is doing well.  We just had a nice talk.  Keep praying for Kimi.  She is still having the swelling in her legs, but she and Pris are getting out a little.

I enjoyed our service last week.  It was good to have even more back with us.  Hopefully it won’t be much longer before Debra is able to join us again.

I’m going to pick up where we left off last week.  We looked at Romans 10, focusing on verses 8-13 and showing how Paul used the old testament to confirm what he wrote.  It makes the central gospel message that much more powerful.

But this passage, often used as we share with others how to be saved, is part of a broader subject.  Paul is explaining God’s relationship to the people of Israel, the Jews.  We’ll continue from verse 14 and see what he has to say.  Some say that God is done with Israel.  Paul, and God, would disagree with that statement.

I look forward to seeing you there on Sunday.

Love y’all!

Larry

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The Bartimaeus Blog 2020.32

Bartimaeus Baptist Temple Posted on August 12, 2020 by LarryAugust 12, 2020

Blessings to you, loved ones!  I pray that your hearts may be full of the joy of the Lord this week.  I’m feeling joyful, though I admit the cause is mostly relief as I return to a more routine schedule.  But there is also the joy of doing what I know God has called me to do.  There is nothing quite like that.  I hope we are all experiencing that joy in our lives.

It was good to be back in church and to see a few more people there.  If you missed it, I want you to know we missed you and that it isn’t the same without you there.  You are part of our family and we love you.

We got word on Monday that Becky Dillard passed away.  Keep the family in prayer.  Ruth has not been feeling well.  I haven’t been able to connect with Debra but keep her in prayer as she recovers.  Her birthday was on Monday.

This Sunday I’m going to talk about a passage that should be just about as well known among Christians as John 3:16.  Many of us have been taught to use it when sharing with someone the plan of salvation.  It was probably shared with many of us for the same reason.  We can quote it, but do we really understand it?  I hope you will join us as we examine these familiar verses in context.  “It starts in the heart.”  It always has, and it always will.  (Romans 10:8-13)

Love y’all!

Larry

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The Bartimaeus Blog 2020.31

Bartimaeus Baptist Temple Posted on August 8, 2020 by LarryAugust 8, 2020

Dear friends, it will be so good to see you tomorrow.  I listened to the recording from last week and there was a lot of talk about getting back to normal.  I appreciate the thoughts expressed.  Normal is a relative concept and not one we should necessarily embrace.  Yet I am very much looking forward to something closer to normal after my marathon work session the past two weeks.  Getting to be with you all is a great start!

I don’t have a lot of news this week.  Since I didn’t get to copy the prayer requests until Thursday, I shared what I had learned since they were made there.  Tim is till in pain but getting better.  Priscilla won’t have to have surgery but will need another month of recovery.  I checked on some others but haven’t connected with them yet.  Keep Ruth in your prayers.  Also remember Debra as she recovers.

This morning I was reading from the book of Jeremiah and came across one of those stories that always caught my attention.  I can’t say why exactly.  God was always having the  prophets do strange things for the purposes of illustration.  Compared to some of the others, this one is rather uninteresting.  At Yahweh’s command, Jeremiah invites a nomadic family into a room at the temple and serves them wine.  They won’t drink it because an ancestor from 200 years ago told them not to.  God then speaks through Jeremiah, using this as an example of how the land of Judah should be listening to Him.  But there are layers to this message that I had not seen before, and a more than one good lesson for us.

Have you ever wondered, “Why am I doing this?”  It’s not a bad question to ask.  Sometimes the answer can help us decide whether we should keep on doing it.  I’ll bet this family, the Rechabites, wondered that from time to time.  It wasn’t just that they couldn’t drink wine.  They were not supposed to build houses either, or plant seeds.  In other words, they were to do nothing that would tie them to one place.  There was nothing legally binding about these commands.  It would not have violated the law to do any of these things.  They did them because their father said to.  There is a commandment they were keeping, the one to honor your parents.  Their faithfulness resulted in honor from God and stood out as an example to the nation.

If you know that what you are doing is right, don’t give up!  Others may think it’s silly.  Sometimes you may wonder at it yourself, but if you stand firm, you will stand out.  This account is found in Jeremiah 35.  We will only read starting from verse 12 tomorrow, but it will help if you read the whole chapter beforehand.

See you there!

Love y’all!

Larry

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The Bartimaeus Blog 2020.30

Bartimaeus Baptist Temple Posted on July 29, 2020 by LarryJuly 29, 2020

Hello everyone.  I pray today finds you rejoicing in the goodness of our God.  Whatever we are going through, we can trust the He takes care of His children. Here’s what’s coming up this weekend.

You’re in for something different.  I am not going to be able to join you, so I have asked one of our own to speak in my place.  Linda and I have been part of BBT for just over twelve years now.  Occasionally we’ve heard him share a testimony or a few words in introduction to a particular son or theme for the day, but I don’t recall hearing him give a sermon.  I had the impression that he might want to, so I asked.

Don Potts will deliver the message this Sunday.  He has spoken to me in the past about his desire that we delve more deeply into the foundations of our theology, so I expect that you will gain a more complete understanding of some aspect of what we believe and why from what he has to say.  On the other hand, his method of accepting my invitation to speak was to hand me a couple of folded sheets the next week with the contents of his message written on them.  🙂 With time and tools at my disposal I might have interpreted that, but at that moment in the flurry of activity that is preparation for the day’s program, I just handed them back to him.  I trust that he has heard from the Lord and that what he brings to you will be from the Lord.

We’ll do our best to facilitate our usual accommodations, but given my schedule this week we may not have everything in place that we usually do.  Please bear with us.

Pray for each other and encourage each other.  Pray for Debra and her family as she has become ill.  I don’t think that made it into the prayer requests from last Sunday.  I hear that April is recovering.  Tim and Cindy were back with us, but Tim is still in some pain.  If I understood correctly, Priscilla has another few days before she will learn whether she needs surgery for that broken elbow.

I just got off the phone with Shelly.  She was taken to the hospital today with severe breathing difficulty.  They have told her she has congestive heart failure.  She has been admitted and they have told her they will keep her for 24-48 hours.  They said they do not want to let her go without the results from the Covid test though she has no other symptoms.  This incident may have been precipitated by missing her medications, but she is concerned by the number of blood tests they are doing.  That is all I know at the moment.

Love y’all!  I’ll miss you this Sunday.

Larry

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The Bartimaeus Blog 2020.29

Bartimaeus Baptist Temple Posted on July 24, 2020 by LarryJuly 24, 2020

Blessings to you, loved ones.  We’re still here.  I just ended up working so much last week that I barely had time to put together a message in the middle of Saturday night and didn’t get to share the usual weekly intro.  We did have church and you can find the podcasts for your listening pleasure or watch the message on Facebook.

We missed those of you who couldn’t make it.  Tim was in some pain after passing a kidney stone.  Debra is in quarantine after finding out that April got the corona virus after they had spent time together.  Priscilla and Kimi made it but Kimi was not doing well and Priscilla has a broken elbow.  Keep these in your prayers.

When the passage for this week was brought to mind, I said, “Lord, I don’t really want to talk about that, but i will if that’s what You want.”  I think it is one of the most challenging parts of scripture.  Turn the other cheek?  If someone sues you, give them more than they are trying to take?  If someone forces you to do something, do more than they demand?  Love your enemies?  Who does that?  Well, apparently we’re supposed to.  I think that last part sums up what this is really all about.  I hope you’ll join me this Sunday as we examine this part of Jesus’ famous “sermon on the mount” from Matthew 5:38-48.

Love y’all!

Larry

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The Bartimaeus Blog 2020.28

Bartimaeus Baptist Temple Posted on July 11, 2020 by LarryJuly 11, 2020

Blessings to you, loved ones.  I hope you are staying cool as Summer in Texas cranks up the heat.  Come join us tomorrow.  Our air conditioner works!  Here’s what to expect.

We all enjoyed our fellowship last Sunday.  We missed those who couldn’t come.  It felt good to be together sharing a meal once again.  Keep Pris and Kimi in prayer.  Pris is feeling better but Kimi is not and is scheduled for more testing.  They think now it may have to do with her liver.  Since she had symptoms typical of Corona they tested her for that as well, and Pris is waiting for those to come back before returning to church lest she expose anyone.  I haven’t heard any more on Brenda’s situation, but Kelly may be in a better place.  We hope, and pray, and trust the Lord.

This week I’m going to see if I can get myself in trouble.  If I do, that’s ok.  I think the subject is important enough to take the chance.  God gave us marriage and family to show us how to relate to Him.  If we learn to do things His way, life will go a lot more smoothly for us.  We’ll be able to face its challenges with the strength that comes from unity.  We’ll be looking at Ephesians 5:22-33.  One think I’ve noticed about this passage is that there is much more instruction in it for men than for women, and much greater responsibility.  That is why I entitled the message, “A Man’s Place.”  Men, my prayer for us is that we will be encouraged, challenged, and inspired to take seriously the role that God has given us.  Women, my prayer for you is that you will stand with us, allowing us to be what we were created to be as we fulfill our commandment from god to do the same for you.

For those of us in less than ideal circumstances, it’s reasonable to ask what this looks like.  I wish I had all the answers, but I don’t.  I will share with you what I know, and we will trust the Lord to show us the rest.  See you tomorrow.

Love y’all!

Larry

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The Bartimaeus Blog 2020.27

Bartimaeus Baptist Temple Posted on July 5, 2020 by LarryJuly 5, 2020

Good morning all.  I hope You were able to have a little fun over the holiday and that you took a moment to reflect on why we celebrate our freedom it and what it takes to keep it.  Today we will be having a celebration at the church.  I’m really looking forward to it.  We’re still proceeding with safety in mind, but I’m so glad that we have chosen to trust our God and to choose to live.  We’ll have the Communion ceremony during the service and then hamburgers and hotdogs afterwards.

I wish I had put this out sooner, but I have been working long hours and just barely got the message together last night.  I wanted to talk about freedom, but I think there’s something more important that we need to focus on right now.  It’s really an extension of what we have been saying for the last few weeks amid all the turmoil in our nation.  In Matthew5:9-12 Jesus says, “Blessed are the peacemakers,” then continues with advice for those who will be persecuted.  I don’t think it’s any accident that these two things are back to back.  Our enemy doesn’t want peace.  He wants to kill, to steal, and to destroy.  We see his work all around us today.  When we take an active roll in making peace, we are going to find ourselves opposed, but we are also in line for a blessing!

What does it mean to be a peacemaker?  We all have some idea.  We probably think of someone who works to resolve conflict.  That’s part of the job of a peacemaker, but there’s a lot more, and we’ll draw from scripture to find the answers.  Even as we celebrate the birth of our great nation, we’re nearly ready to fight another civil war.  The church has it’s work cut out, and we’d better get busy doing it or we may find we’ve lost the opportunity.

I hope to see you this afternoon.  Let’s invite the Holy Spirit for some real fireworks!

Love y’all,

Larry

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The Bartimaeus Blog 2020.26

Bartimaeus Baptist Temple Posted on June 28, 2020 by LarryJune 28, 2020

Blessings to you, people of God!  My prayer right now is that we proclaim boldly the mighty name of Jesus, that the world may hear and believe.  Here is what to expect on the Lord’s day this week.

I got a call from Kelvin on Friday.  He said the lockdown ends for him on August 4.  That seems like an odd date to me, but I am sure he will let us know the moment he is able to come back.  It will be good to have him with us.  I wish everyone was so eager to come to church.

As of my last chat with Brenda there was not anything definitive to report, but we are trusting God to bring that situation to a resolution.  Kimi has been really sick the past week, so keep her in prayer.  I am sure we’ll have more details from the praise and prayer requests later today.

Over the past couple of weeks I have been talking to you about Jesus.  I’ve talked about Jesus being the only solution to the problems our nation is facing and then about who He really is.  I thought I was ready to move on, but god kept drawing me back, so this time I will speak on the name of Jesus.

What’s so important about His name?  It has to be more than the combination of letters that make it up.  that changes with language, and is actually a rather common name.  It was not that uncommon even in His day.  When we talk about Jesus’s name, we are talking about the power and authority of His name.  We are making reference to the person behind the name, and that is where its power comes from.

There is much teaching on this subject, and I think some of it actually encourages the misuse of his name, violating the commandment of Exodus 20:7.  The most important thing we need to know about the name of Jesus is that it carries with it the power to save souls.  His name can only be used to accomplish His purposes.  It is not a magical incantation to be applied at our whim.  It is holy, powerful, and praiseworthy.  When we pray in His name, we are asserting that the things which we have asked are within His authority to grant and also according to His will.  As His children, we carry His name.  Everything we do reflects on Him, and we are to be about His business.

We’ll read from Acts 4:9-12.  Peter and John have been arrested, jailed for a night, and are now being questioned by the Jewish leaders.  Their crime, the healing of a man who was lame and begging at the gate of the temple.  They might have let that go, but the disciples were attributing this miracle to Jesus and preaching in the temple.  These rulers thought they had stopped all that by crucifying Jesus, but it didn’t work!  We are dropping in as Peter responds to the question back in verse 7, “”By what power, or in what name, have you done this?”  Peter boldly proclaims that it was by the name of Jesus, and that there is no other name by which we must be saved.

I want to see you at church today.  In the name of Jesus be there!  🙂

Love y’all,

Larry

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The Bartimaeus Blog 2020.25

Bartimaeus Baptist Temple Posted on June 18, 2020 by LarryJune 18, 2020

Blessings to you, loved ones.  Here’s the scoop.

This Sunday will be Father’s Day.  For many of us, it will be a time to remember dads who are no longer with us, and so may bring some sadness with it.  My prayer is that you remember the good times and take comfort if you can from the hope that you will see them again.  Still others may not have known or had good relationships with their fathers.  For you I pray that the love of the Heavenly Father will heal the wounds and make you whole.  If you still can, this is an opportunity to let your dad know how much he means to you.  I am very thankful for mine.  I rarely miss an opportunity to tell people what a wise and loving father he has been to me.  I tell him the same.

We’ve been talking for the last couple of weeks about who Jesus is.  We know him as God, and also as the son of God.  For there to be a son, there must be a father.  It is in the New testament that this revelation of God also emerges.  Jesus speaks much about His Father, and through Him we see who the Father is and how much He loves us.  But that is not to say that this imagery is absent from the Old Testament.  A powerful picture can be found in the account of Abraham when God commands that he sacrifice his son.  You can read about it in Genesis 22.  For the sake of time I’ll only read Genesis 22:1-6, but the story goes through verse 19.

We’re not told what thoughts went through Abraham’s head upon receiving such a command.  We can imagine confusion, anger, even a sens of betrayal.  Isaac was a miracle baby, born to Abraham and Sarah in their old age after a visit from an angel.  Abraham was told on more than one occasion that Isaac would be the heir through which God’s promises would be fulfilled.  This demand would seem to render all of that impossible.  But Abraham does not appear to question.  He gets up the next morning , collects the things he will need, and sets out with Isaac and a couple of servants.

We are given the journey in some detail.  When they arrive at the place, Abraham tells his servants to stay behind and that he and Isaac will go worship and return.  I used to read that and think Abraham was hiding the truth of what He as about to do, but the writer of Hebrews helped me to see that wasn’t it at all.  In Heb. 11;19, we are told that Abraham knew that God was able to raise Isaac from the dead if necessary.  Whatever questions he may have had about this command, seemingly contrary to everything we know about God, He did not lose faith in God’s original promise.  He did believe they were going to come back as they left, together.

Isaac noticed something was missing on this little trip.  He asked his father about it.  There was wood, and fire, and a knife, but where was the sacrifice?  Abraham then made another profound statement, “God will provide the lamb.”  Maybe at this point he did hope to hide the terrible truth from his son for just a little longer, but the moment would come when he would tie up his son and lay him on that altar.  What must that have been like for Isaac?

When God saw that Abraham was going to follow through and kill his son, He intervened.  He did in fact provide a lamb, which was sacrificed in place of Isaac.  The analogies here can only be taken so far, but God pictures for us in a way that we can understand what he will eventually do Himself when Jesus is sent to die for all of our sins.  With confidence that God would still somehow keep his promise, Abraham was willing to give up his cherished son because God required it.  Father God, who loved his own son with a depth we cannot comprehend, gave Him up in the knowledge that in so doing He would have Him back along with all of those He died to save.  I look forward to exploring “The Father’s Sacrifice” with you on Sunday.

Love y’all!

Larry

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The Bartimaeus Blog 2020.24

Bartimaeus Baptist Temple Posted on June 14, 2020 by LarryJune 14, 2020

Good morning, God’s people!  If it’s not morning for you, have a good one tomorrow!  🙂  It’s going to be a warm one today, but He gave us air conditioning, so come and join the warm harts in our cool building.  I’m about to tel you what has been planned, but who knows what God may do?

We had a good group again last week and I thank God for making a way and all of you for coming.  Even with the care we’re taking to keep everyone safe, we still have room for more, so invite a friend!

Last week I addressed the unrest that has been sweeping the nation in the wake of the death of George Floyd.  The killing and the trouble that followed are symptoms of a much greater problem that is deeper than the ones that might come to mind.  Put simply, we need Jesus.

What does that mean?  I know in this church you’ve heard the gospel message.  Every one of us has given a testimony at some point since Linda and I have been attending, and I work it in from time to time because it’s the most important message we have.  We sing about Jesus.  We often pray to Jesus.  We end our prayers in Jesus’s name.  We talk about knowing Jesus, but sometimes I wonder if many who go by the name Christian really get who Jesus is.  I dare say we all picture Him as less than what He is most of the time.

Our pictures certainly do not depict Him as He is today, and most are not even close to what he probably looked like while He was here.  Turn to Chapter 1 of Revelation to get as close as we are likely to get to what He might look like if he appeared today.  What we need to understand is who He is.  For that we can turn to the Gospel of John.  John opens his account with this, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”  Know this, and everything else falls into place.  We’ll read John 1:1-5 and let the Word open our hearts.

See you soon.

Love y’all!

Larry

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