Monday, March 19, 2012

Resume for Jesus Christ

This was in an email I recently received and find it quite a blessing. In these troubled days with a lousy economy and unemployment at an embarrassing high, it's good to know in "Whom we live and breathe and have our being"!  It's good to know in Whom we trust.  Enjoy the following, and don't hesitate to copy and share.


The Resume of Jesus Christ
Address:     Ephesians 1:20
Phone:        Romans 10:13
Website:      The Bible . Keywords: Christ, Lord, Savior and Jesus
_____________________________________________________
Objective
My name is Jesus -The Christ. Many call me Lord! I've sent you my resume because I'm seeking the top management position in your heart. Please consider my accomplishments as set forth in my resume.
_____________________________________________________________________
Qualifications
I founded the earth and established the heavens, (See Proverbs 3:19)
I formed man from the dust of the ground, (See Genesis 2:7)
I breathed into man the breath of life, (See Genesis 2:7)
I redeemed man from the curse of the law, (See Galatians 3:13)
The blessings of the Abrahamic Covenant come upon your life through me, (See Galatians 3:14)
_____________________________________________________________________
Occupational Background
I've only had one employer, (See Luke 2:49 ).
I've never been tardy, absent, disobedient, slothful or disrespectful.
My employer has nothing but rave reviews for me, (See Matthew 3:15 -17)
_____________________________________________________________________
Skills Work Experiences
Some of my skills and work experiences include: empowering the poor to be poor no more, healing the brokenhearted, setting the captives free, healing the sick, restoring sight to the blind and setting at liberty them that are bruised, (See Luke 4:18).
I am a Wonderful Counselor, (See Isaiah 9:6). People who listen to me shall dwell safely and shall not fear evil, (See Proverbs 1:33 ).
Most importantly, I have the authority, ability and power to cleanse you of your sins, (See I John 1:7-9)
Educational Background
I encompass the entire breadth and length of knowledge, wisdom and understanding, (See Proverbs 2:6).
In me are hid all of the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, (See Colossians 2:3).
My Word is so powerful; it has been described as being a lamp unto your feet and a light unto your path, (See Psalms 119:105).
I can even tell you all of the secrets of your heart, (See Psalms 44:21).
_____________________________________________________________________
Major Accomplishments
I was an active participant in the greatest Summit Meeting of all times, (See Genesis 1:26 ).
I laid down my life so that you may live, (See II Corinthians 5:15 ).
I defeated the arch enemy of God and mankind and made a show of them openly, (See Colossians 2:15 ).
I've miraculously fed the poor, healed the sick and raised the dead!
There are many more major accomplishments, too many to mention here. You can read them on my website, which is located at: www dot - the BIBLE. You don't need an Internet connection or computer to access my website.
_____________________________________________________________________
References
Believers and followers worldwide will testify to my divine healing, salvation, deliverance, miracles, restoration and supernatural guidance.
_____________________________________________________________________
In Summation
Now that you've read my resume, I'm confident that I'm the only candidate uniquely qualified to fill this vital position in your heart. In summation, I will properly direct your paths, (See Proverbs 3:5-6), and lead you into everlasting life, (See John 6:47 ). When can I start? Time is of the essence, (See Hebrews 3:15 ).
Send this resume to everyone you know,
you never know who may have an opening!
Thanks for your help.

Author unknown
posted at Collateral Grace by Cat Brennan




Saturday, January 14, 2012

The Resurrection: Ultimate Life Giving Experience

This isn't a new piece; I wrote and posted it at Easter-time in 2010. But the truths herein haven't change.  Jesus is the same yesterday, today and forever so, please enjoy...

Christian ichthusAs I began to write this morning, the day the Christian world celebrates Good Friday, I was drawn to some precious memories, specifically that old song we sang in the choir when I was a little girl; Were You There? I remember even before I knew “who or what” Jesus was, those words had a powerful impact on me. There was motion within my soul that only God could soothe. The song still blesses me. Were YOU there when they crucified MY Lord (author’s emphasis)?

As the Easter weekend progresses, I give pause to what this means to me. I see Resurrection Day as The Ultimate Life Giving experience. My pastor referred to that day we historically celebrate as Resurrection Day as the Ultimate Recovery because death was defeated.

I don’t have a problem with Easter eggs, Easter bunny, and baby chick-sort of celebrations, either. These all represent Life and all point the way toward Life and the One who gave it.

During the period of the first day of Spring to Easter, I wear a pair of green Easter Bunny earrings that belonged to my late mother-in-law. That woman did “love her some holidays”. In her healthier days, she dressed herself, her poodle, her house and her front yard in keeping with the holiday of record. She and her son had an on-going battle regarding Easter bunnies and lambs during the Easter season. You see, he is a Christian and she was a Buddhist. She gleefully razzed him with bunnies and he returned the favor with lambs.

I’ve come to the conclusion that I can wear the green bunnies with a clear conscience as a Christian and can remember better times with her while doing so. If my life and actions don’t proclaim my Christian beliefs then the jewelry I wear won’t make any difference. Green is my favorite color, along with raspberry pink, and spring just works for me. Easter is such a wonderful occasion and so much more than a holiday. Whether you’re a believer or not, this event we call Easter seems to give license to all kinds of life-loving activities including church-going, gardening, putting away the old and cold of winter, sprouts of life, baby chicks, even Peeps TM, water-intense shenanigans and wistful wanderings through garden centers. Life is in the air. Easter is the exclamation mark that issues forth the orders, “Skedaddle, Old Winter”!

Life is what Christ came to do … He told us that He came to give us life; life more abundantly (John 10:10b). He told us, “I am the way, the truth and the life. No man comes to the Father, but by me.” (John 14:6) The book of John, in particular, is full of God’s love for you and me.

My question for you is this: What if there really is a heaven and a hell? What if Jesus really is the ONLY way to heaven?

If you have asked Him to be the Lord of your life, you’re heaven bound. If Jesus is the real thing and you don’t choose Him as your Lord, you’ll spend eternity in the fiery pit of hell. If it’s all a big hoax, you’ve lost nothing! What have you got to lose? NOTHING! Call it fire insurance, if you will. The premiums are paid in full.

I won’t belabor the ugliness and hatred that has recently made the headlines all in the name of Him. This has been going on for centuries and the devil is still the same liar and isn’t worthy of any space.

Jesus is all about Love, and before He left, he issued The Great Commission (John 16:15-16) .. go spread the good news. The good news, or Gospel, tells us God loves us. In fact, He loves us so much that He sent His son to die for us (John 3:16). He created us and wants fellowship with us. We’re His kids.

We, as parents, desire to spend time with our kids, don’t we? God is The Ultimate Father and head of the family, and He beckons us to come and spend time with Him.  

Come ... linger ... sit on the front porch and talk with Him. Wander out in the forest and take in His splendor. Step out in the moonlight along the beach and just listen for Him.

I pray that you will realize the full impact of this beautiful season of new life. Watch as it unfolds and drink in its splendor. May you all experience a Happy Easter. Enjoy the kids and their sweet frolics; be sure to save a chocolate bunny for me! Country Easter Blessings to you all.

© 2010 Cat Brennan

Football and Faith


me
Hating Tim Tebow
Friday, January 13, 2012
By Matt Barber

I grew up in Denver and am admittedly biased. I’m a Denver Broncos fanatic. In the Mile High City, the Broncos are more than just a football team; they’re an institution.


Everybody loves a comeback. Former Broncos quarterback John Elway — one of the greatest QBs in NFL history — had comebacks in his DNA. Since he retired in 1999 after back-to-back Super Bowl wins, Denver fans have been jonesing for that regular shot of adrenaline Elway provided week in, week out.

Enter Tim Tebow. In the category of, “Holy cow, can he actually do it?” no Broncos QB since Elway has delivered like Tebow has. He feels familiar. This is what Broncos fans expect. We don’t do steady. We prefer up and down, high and low until that improbable rocket launch to victory in the final seconds of the game.

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Will Tebow end up an NFL great like John Elway? That remains to be seen. Opinions are all over the place. But what is certain is that Tim Tebow is more than just a sports phenomenon. He’s a cultural phenomenon.
For starters, Tebow’s very existence is somehow controversial. He’s a walking pro-life testimonial. He’s been pulling off comebacks since before he was born. Pam Tebow, Tim’s mother, courageously chose to carry baby Tim to term despite doctors’ recommendations that she abort him.

You may recall that before Tim went pro, the Christian group, Focus on the Family, commissioned an innocuous TV ad that ran during the 2010 Saints-Colts Super Bowl game. It briefly told the story of the Tebows’ pre-natal struggle. The word “abortion” was never even uttered, but a positive portrayal of childbearing was all it took.

And so began the left’s hate affair with Tim Tebow. Radical feminist groups, media-types and liberal pundits alike lost their collective noodle even before the ad ran.

Erin Mattson, vice president of The National Organization for Women (NOW), told ABC News that Tim’s story of survival was “really quite offensive. … This ad is hate masquerading as love!” she barked. Tim wasn’t dismembered alive and scraped in pieces from his mother’s womb, you see.

The New York-based Women’s Media Center launched a failed censorship petition drive to pull the ad, framing it as an “attack on choice.” Get it? Pam Tebow chose alright; she just happened to make the wrong “choice,” and dared to share about it publicly.

But as a Denver Bronco, Tim Tebow’s profile has grown exponentially. So too has the left’s hatred for him.
This is due in large part to his very open Christian faith. After each game, Tim begins by thanking God: “First and foremost, I’d like to thank my Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.”

And who hasn’t heard of “Tebowing,” wherein one drops to a knee in prayer?

Then there’s Tim’s favorite Bible verse, John 3:16, which he’s known to wear painted in black swaths under each eye. After the Broncos’ recent electrifying playoff win against the Pittsburgh Steelers in overtime, John 3:16 was reportedly the most popular search term on the Internet.
Remarkably, during the game Tebow passed for precisely 316 yards and averaged 31.6 yards per completed pass. The television viewing audience for the last 15 minutes of the game was 31.6 percent. This only added to the mystique.
So big was the story, in fact, that major news outlets like CNN ran the text of John 3:16 in its entirety: “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.”

The attention that Tebow’s bold Christian faith has drawn to the Gospel message has secular “progressives” and other God-deniers tied in knots.

American Atheists, a New Jersey-based group that promotes religious cleansing from the public sphere, says that Tebow is “full of cr*p.”

“Tebow takes religion and injects it into the mix and divides the fan base,” complained David Silverman, the group’s president.

“[Religion] injects the divisive force into football,” he continued (because, absent religion, football is just a touchy-feely snuggle fest). “Why in the world are we talking about religion when we are talking about football?” he demanded.

Of course, Tim Tebow is merely doing what Jesus asks of his followers: “Whoever acknowledges me before men, I will also acknowledge him before my Father in heaven.” (Matthew 10:32)

The problem is that secular “progressives” don’t want Christ acknowledged before anyone, period; and they endeavor to shut down or mock anybody who tries.

During the Broncos’ regular season loss to the Buffalo Bills, for instance, “progressive” troglodyte and pseudo-intellectual funnyman Bill Maher tweeted about the game, encapsulating the left’s visceral hatred for Tim Tebow in 140 characters or less: “Wow, Jesus just [expletive deleted] #TimTebow bad! And on Xmas Eve! Somewhere in hell Satan is tebowing, saying to Hitler ‘Hey, Buffalo’s killing them.’”

Jesus addressed the Bill Mahers of the world — past, present and future — on more than one occasion. In John 15:18-20, for instance, He reminds His followers: “If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first. If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world. That is why the world hates you.”
Those who belong to the world do indeed hate Tim Tebow. He stands for much of what our postmodern popular culture despises: sexual purity within the bonds of natural marriage, the sanctity of human life, selflessness, personal charity, humility and much, much more.

I mean, Tim Tebow has never even been arrested for drug possession or sexual assault, for crying out loud. We simply can’t allow children this kind of role model.
So, does God care about who wins NFL football games? Probably not. Does he care about those who play, watch and love football? Unquestionably.

Win or lose, no matter what happens with the rest of the Denver Broncos football season, one thing is for sure: people will keep talking about Tim Tebow. And when people are talking about Tim Tebow, they can’t help but talk about the profound faith that drives him both on and off the field.

In the meantime: Go Broncos!

Matt Barber (@jmattbarber on Twitter) is an attorney concentrating in constitutional law. He serves as Vice President of Liberty Counsel Action.

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From The Weekend Church Report

Tim Tebow's Good News
Monday, January 9, 2012
By Esther Fleece

No, God is not a Denver Broncos fan – certainly not in the sense of the people who paint their faces half orange and half blue and cheer on the home team at Sports Authority Field at Mile High. So Sunday’s exciting-as-it-was-unlikely playoff win over the defending AFC champion Pittsburgh Steelers was not, in any way that would suggest the creator of the universe picks sides in a football game, an “act of divine intervention.”

But that doesn’t mean His name wasn’t glorified in the Broncos’ 29-23 victory led by quarterback Tim Tebow, whose unconventional playing style and uncompromising expressions of his Christian faith have made him one of the NFL’s top stories this season.

I’ve been to plenty of football games – some of my dearest friends in the world are the families of former Detroit Lion and Bronco Luther Elliss and former Bronco and Atlanta Falcon Jason Elam – but I’ve never experienced anything like I did Sunday. Yes, the action on the field was thrilling – but it is the discussions in the stands I’ll remember, which will have real impact long after the details of yet another “Tebow Time” comeback have faded.

As an evangelical Christian, like Tebow, I am called to share my faith with others – that’s why we call it the “good news.” Sometimes, that can be a daunting responsibility – the Bible tells us that the way of Jesus can be offensive to those who don’t know Him. But there was an openness to hearing the Gospel all around me and my friends Sunday, as complete strangers asked us, in the midst of the game’s tensest moments, if we “pray like Tebow does” when circumstances turn challenging. (This is as good a place as any to point out that Tebow is hardly the only, or even the most outspoken, follower of Christ in pro football. Devout Christians suit up every weekend for every team in the NFL.)

Tim Tebow himself, as humble as he is, would likely be the first person to reject what I’m about to say, but as a Christian football fan living in Colorado, I can’t help but think that the “platform” God has given him – for which he always expresses thanks in interviews – makes him a little like John the Baptist. In the Bible, John the Baptist comes to prepare the people of Judea for Jesus’ arrival, as “a witness to testify concerning the light, so that through him all might believe. He himself was not the light; he came only as a witness to the light.” (John 1:7-8). In other words, Tim Tebow isn’t the Messiah (it’s actually quite sacrilegious to even joke that he is), but he takes every opportunity presented him to point people to the Messiah.

Anecdotes of how Tebow has done this could cover a football field. A caller to a Denver talk show several weeks back said he was at the Broncos-Bears game on Dec. 11, and when it appeared there was no way the team could win he turned to his friend and said, “If we pull this out, I’m going to church.” The team did pull it out, in overtime, and he told the radio host was going to keep his end of the bargain and attend a worship service.

After the win over the Steelers, the social media world began lighting up with the fact that Tebow had thrown for 316 yards – as in John 3:16. A friend posted this fact on his Facebook page, not to prove that God roots for Denver, but in the hope that some of his friends who did not know Jesus might look the verse up and learn more about God’s goodness and plan for salvation. Sure enough, one of his friends did just that. And John 3:16, like it did when Tebow scribbled it into his eyeblack during his days at the University of Florida, became one of the Internet’s top search terms again.

Now it’s on to New England for the Broncos, where they’ll take on the Patriots in another game the “experts” are giving them little chance of winning. That means another week of Tebow talk, some from him, mostly about him, with additional opportunities for every day believers to plant seeds of the Gospel and no shortage of opinions about whether he’s right or wrong to be “mixing religion with football.”

Interestingly, that discussion will happen as Tebow leads his team in pursuit of the Vince Lombardi Trophy, the NFL’s highest honor, named for the legendary Green Bay Packers coach who said this in a May 1964 speech to the First Friday Club of Los Angeles:

“When we place our dependence in God, we are unencumbered, and we have no worry. In fact, we may even be reckless, insofar as our part in the production is concerned. This confidence, this sureness of action, is both contagious and an aid to the perfect action.

“The rest is in the hands of God -- and this is the same God, gentlemen, who has won all of His battles up to now.”

And those are the eternal victories Tim Tebow understands matter more than anything that happens on a football field.

Esther Fleece is an assistant to the president of millennial relations for Focus on the Family. She speaks regularly on behalf of Focus at venues such as the National Day of Prayer Summit, the Values Voters Summit and the National Conference of Christian Apologetics. Fleece holds a bachelors degree in communications from Oakland University.

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Friday, September 9, 2011

OF HEAVEN

As I am putting this blog site together, I'm trying to decide on the layout, but I don't want to delay launching this tool any longer.

For now, let me tell you about a little book I just finished reading. It's not a big book, but is full of a big ideas.  It's not even a hard back, but it's got Hard-Core truth.  It's a rather simple book with a simple message; the BIG message, the Hard-Core truth is that God loves us.

The little book is about a little boy's experience in "dying" and going to heaven.  It holds up to scripture very well. 

The little book grabbed my attention and wouldn't let go.  It is well written by the daddy of this little boy.

Do you have kids? Do you know Jesus? Have you ever gotten mad at God? And screamed and yelled at Him?  Have you had a miscarriage? Have you ever been down to your "last nerve"? Have the medical bills piled up and the 'hard stuff' just won't let up?  Have you ever wanted or needed or prayed for asked for or had a miracle? Have you wondered if God is real? Have you wondered about heaven?

May I suggest this wonderful little book, HEAVEN IS FOR REAL. It is written by Todd Burpo with Lynn Vincent.  Todd is a Pastor in the Midwest and it is his little boy about whom this book is written.

I came away from reading this, realizing I wanted to share it with everyone I know.  I actually got my copy at the library. It must be very popular as I put a "hold" on it more than two months ago, and just got it a week ago. It should be popular. It could change your life.

I pray that you will come to recognize Collateral Grace in your life.
© 2011 Cat Brennan