{"id":9868,"date":"2021-08-29T13:23:00","date_gmt":"2021-08-29T17:23:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/?post_type=message&#038;p=9868"},"modified":"2021-09-05T13:26:24","modified_gmt":"2021-09-05T17:26:24","slug":"glorifying-god-together","status":"publish","type":"message","link":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/message\/glorifying-god-together","title":{"rendered":"Glorifying God Together"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Below is an automated transcript of this message<\/h3>\n\n\n\n <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1.84\">Good <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> morning church. It\u2019s good to see all of you here this morning!   We&#8217;re in the fourth Sunday of our sermon series entitled,  \u201cBetter Together.\u201d  We are better together. God has made us for Himself and He&#8217;s made us for one another. We were built as relational creatures,  meant to be in relationship with God and with one another.  As we conclude this series today, in part four, we&#8217;re going to  be talking about glorifying God together.  <br \/><br \/>\nI would be remiss to not pray today for those that are helping us raise our children together. I would invite you,  if you&#8217;re a teacher, whether it&#8217;s in the public school system or the private private school or a school administrator, would you mind to stand your feet just for a second so I can pray for you?  If you&#8217;re a school teacher or an administrator,  go ahead and stand and remain standing for a second so I can pray for you all. Give them  <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"57.99\">a <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> hand;  we appreciate you. We are  thankful for you. Let me pray for you.  \u201cLord. We  pray right now for our teachers and for administrators that are just getting started this year.   We pray for their passion and for their power,  for their strength,  that it would come from You and they would recognize the influence they have in helping us raise up the next generation. Lord,  bless  them now,  in Your name we pray.   Amen.\u201d   Thank you,  teachers and administrators.  We love you and we appreciate the work you do.<br \/><br \/>\nOver the past four weeks, we&#8217;ve talked about what it looks like to do life together. We talked about the necessity of growing up in  spiritual maturity.  You can&#8217;t do it by yourself to grow up the way the Lord would have us, we need each other. Last week,  we talked about how,  sometimes,  we offend each other and then,  as a result,  we have a hard <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"115.76\">time <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> staying together. We talked about forgiveness and reconciliation last week. <br \/><br \/>\nThis week,  we&#8217;re going to be talking about the purpose of being together and how it becomes like a light to the world.  Do you know the Lord&#8217;s Prayer? \u201cOur Father, which art in heaven\u2026\u201d  That&#8217;s the one we know as  the Lord&#8217;s Prayer.   That&#8217;s the Lord&#8217;s teaching prayer because He was teaching His disciples how to pray. If you want to read one of His prayers, one of his most powerful prayers is recorded in John 17. Do you know what He prays for? He prays that we would be one with Him and with one another, just as He and the Father are one.  And then,  He says that He wants to give us His glory and His oneness,  so that the world, when they look at us, they&#8217;ll know we are  His followers.   The greatest <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"168.13\">evidence <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> that we are of Christ is our togetherness, that we love each other and take care of each other. <br \/><br \/>\nAs you look at our world today, especially if you look at America today, would you say that at least in our lifetime, our world seems to be the most disunified? Everything is just so disunified. So,  that makes the church all the more important at this time; we need to be the kind of people who love each other and get along, so  it would cause the world to look at us.   God, I need some of that.  Whatever that is that they have,  I want some of that. And so,  we&#8217;re better together; it&#8217;s the Lord&#8217;s purpose. <br \/><br \/>\nDo you want to help the last prayer of jesus? John 17 records His prayer before He went to the cross,  before He went to the Garden of Gethsemane.  Do you <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"222.34\">want <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>to help His prayers get answered?  You can help by starting to love and serve each other. Not that God needs any help answering the prayer of Jesus. God&#8217;s going to do it, but let\u2019s  cooperate so we&#8217;re better together and we bring glory to God when we&#8217;re together.   <br \/><br \/>\nDon&#8217;t you want to glorify God with your life? Here\u2019s  the thing; you can&#8217;t do it by yourself. You&#8217;re just one little candle. Just one little candle. But if we all get together it creates a great light.  <br \/><br \/>\nIn the first epistle that Peter writes to the scattered church throughout Asia minor, He says this, he says, \u201cI&#8217;m going to give you some instructions on how that you can serve one another and take care of each other so that you glorify God together.\u201d  I believe that we can hear these instructions from 1 Peter on how we can glorify God together. <br \/><br \/>\nAs we look at the text, I think we&#8217;ll see three instructions. So, let&#8217;s look at chapter four.  \nWe&#8217;re <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"274.86\">going to <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> pick it up at 1 Peter 4:8-11 (ESV) 8 \u201cAbove all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins. 9 Show hospitality to one another without grumbling. 10 As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God&#8217;s varied grace: 11 whoever speaks, as one who speaks oracles of God; whoever serves, as one who serves by the strength that God supplies\u2014in order that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ. To him belong glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.\u201d This is God&#8217;s word. <br \/><br \/>\nWe are looking for three instructions on how to glorify God together. Here&#8217;s the first instruction. <br \/><br \/>\nHow to Glorify God Together:\n1. Earnestly love one another without offense.\n \nIf you&#8217;re looking at the  reading today, how many \u201cone another&#8217;s\u201d  do you see in today&#8217;s reading of  verses 8 to 11? How many \u201cone anothers\u201d  do you see?  How many do you see? Do you see three? So <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"349.07\">let&#8217;s <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> look for three instructions. You see,  it&#8217;s not rocket science.   We study God&#8217;s word and let it speak for itself. That&#8217;s where our three instructions are gonna come from. It\u2019s  the three \u201cone anothers\u201d <br \/><br \/>\nVerse eight has the first \u201cone another.\u201d   \u201cAbove all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins.\u201d Notice,  he begins with this phrase,  \u201cabove all.\u201d  This is saying, make it a priority. Make it number one on your list of priorities that you love one another earnestly.   It implies that he&#8217;s already told us some other things prior to this. Indeed he has. 1 Peter 4:7 (ESV) \u201cThe end of all things is at hand; therefore be self-controlled and sober-minded for the sake of your prayers.\u201d  It&#8217;s urgent and important. It&#8217;s urgent because the end of all things is at hand.   Peter is saying that there&#8217;s nothing that&#8217;s keeping Jesus from coming back at any time. <br \/><br \/>\nIt  was 2000 years ago when Peter wrote this.   <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"408.26\">You <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> might say, Well, Peter got it wrong. Peter saw Jesus, not long after that. So he got it right for himself. But as he thinks about the timeline, what does Jesus need to do before he comes back again? Really nothing. There&#8217;s no biblical reason that he can&#8217;t come back already. <br \/><br \/>\nThere&#8217;s some things in the prophecy that seemed to indicate that they needed to happen before His return. In 70AD, they destroyed Jerusalem and there was no place called Israel until 1947.   Did you know, in history there&#8217;s never been a case of a country disappearing for 2000 years and then reappearing?   That&#8217;s never happened before. But prophecy talks about how Israel would be present in the last days. There&#8217;s really nothing preventing Jesus from showing up right now. What this should do for us,  is give us a sense of urgency that we need to, above all, start doing the things he told us to do. It&#8217;s not just important because <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"474.2\">he <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> said it, it&#8217;s urgent because  He&#8217;s coming soon. We&#8217;ll face Him soon. <br \/><br \/>\nThe most important thing is that we love one another earnestly.  What kind of love does he give you? He gives you a kind of love that he says is motivated in a certain way and has a certain outcome.   It covers over a multitude of sins. In verse 8,  he says,  \u201cloving one another earnestly since love covers a multitude of sins.\u201d   Peter is not saying that our love has an atoning power;  that it can somehow cause people to get forgiveness with God. No, that&#8217;s not what he&#8217;s saying.   Jesus does that, that&#8217;s from Jesus.  Does it mean Peter is saying that we should cover things up,  we should just not address things?  No, that can&#8217;t be right because you can&#8217;t cover up things; they always pop back up <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"538.91\">again <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> and they always pop up worse. That can&#8217;t be it. What does he mean that this kind of earnest love covers a multitude, all kinds of sins. <br \/><br \/>\nI think what he&#8217;s saying is that our love for each other should make it possible for us to not be so easily offended by one another so that we give grace to people. I can tell that he was having a bad day. <br \/><br \/>\nMy wife and I&#8217;ve been married for  42 years.   We got  into a few fights early on,  trying to help each other change. And then, after a while, I began to think,  She can&#8217;t help it.  She also,  thinks, You know what <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"598.43\">? <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> He&#8217;s just going to  stay that way I guess.  You learn to put up with it .  You get to where it doesn&#8217;t offend you like it used to because love covers it over.   If you have a  car, you need to put oil in the motor because the gears get hot, the more they rub together.  If you let it run dry, your motor will seize up. The heat will just seize it up and the gears will explode. This is  a picture,  a metaphor,  for this kind of love.   We have to have it because the gears of our relationships create a little heat from time to time. But that \u201coil that grace\u201d  that love creates is  so we are able to tolerate it.  We are able  to live together and to love each other.  We are able to   love each other earnestly. <br \/><br \/>\nHere&#8217;s what Dr. Schreiner says about <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"665.76\">this <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> passage,  about this kind of love that covers a multitude of sins.  He says, \u201cWhen believers lavish love on others, the sins and offenses of others are overlooked.\u201d  Peter was quoting proverbs when he said this.  Proverbs 17:9 (ESV) \u201cWhoever covers an offense seeks love, but he who repeats a matter separates close friends.\u201d  <br \/><br \/>\nI was thinking about all the way back in the Old Testament, with the story of Noah, who, after building the ark and after the flood dried up, he  planted a vineyard.   The scripture says that he drank too much and he was drunk.  Here&#8217;s the man of God, the righteous man of God.   He drank too much and he&#8217;s laying <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"728.11\">in <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> his tent without clothes on.   His son,  Ham,  goes in,  sees him and comes out.  He tells his brothers that  the old man&#8217;s there, he drank too much and he&#8217;s laying there naked. He talks about it to them. But the two other sons, Shem and Japheth, go into the tent  backwards with a blanket and cover him.   What&#8217;s that story about? It seems to be a story illustrating this, that rather than doing what  the Proverb says, \u201cWhoever covers an offense seeks love, but he who repeats a matter separates close friends.\u201d  Instead of going out,  repeating it and making their sin broadcast,  love says, No, let me help you with this. Let me help you get a covering for this. <br \/><br \/>\nWe need to be that kind of people, the kind of people that make allowances for others.  Faults that  aren&#8217;t so quick to be offended and judged <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"790.41\">.<i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span><br \/><br \/>\nColossians 3:13 (NLT) \u201cMake allowance for each other\u2019s faults, and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others.\u201d Plus,  it&#8217;s the mark of being a disciple of Jesus, a follower of jesus.<br \/><br \/>\nThis is Jesus speaking, John 13:34-35 (ESV) 34 \u201cA new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another. 35 By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.\u201d  It&#8217;s the mark of being a believer. Not that you&#8217;re a \u201cgoody two shoes,\u201d  not that you&#8217;re judgmental, but that you love each other, that you have the kind of love that&#8217;s unoffendable and that you make allowance for one another. <br \/><br \/>\nIn Brant Hansen\u2019s book, \u201cUnoffendable,\u201d he tells of a time when he worked part-time as a baseball game announcer. He described the two full-time announcers as very different people. He called one \u201cbuttoned-down John\u201d and the other \u201cprofane Bob.\u201d \n<span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"848.02\">He <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> said that he would fill in for them from time to time. John and Bob were very different people. \nHe writes:  \u201cI was the guy they\u2019d call to fill in for a friend of mine named John, who\u2019s an absolutely brilliant announcer, and a very well-known radio pro too. John is a class act. He arrives at each game impeccably dressed, highly organized, and briefcase in hand. That\u2019s how he rolls. He\u2019s polished. He\u2019s polite. He\u2019s clean. He\u2019s smooth. He\u2019s successful. He\u2019s also a professing Christian.  Seated next to John at each game is his polar opposite in the behavior department. Bill is a grizzled former player whose life has taken some twists and turns for the worst. He\u2019s boisterous and foul. His language is remarkably crude. <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"904.12\">, <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>pornographic, even. He\u2019s very tough to take. \nAs I worked with Bill, filling in for John, I wondered, Wow! How does John, who\u2019s even more take-charge, blunt, and straight-laced than I am, deal with this guy? And it\u2019s night in, night out. I can\u2019t imagine how he handles this.   When profane Bill found out I was friends with buttoned-down John, he gave me my answer. I braced myself. I\u2019ll leave the profanity out, but it went something like this: \u201cYou\u2019re friends with John, really?\u201d \u201cOh, yeah.\u201d \u201cYou know what? I got something to say about that guy. That guy, John, is . . .\u201d He paused.  Then, momentarily, he continued: \u201cA couple of weeks ago, you know what he did? He brought in a plaque he had made for me. It was the magazine cover from back in the day, me and my teammates. He<span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"959.88\">had <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>an original cover put in the plaque, and he gave it to me to honor me.\u201d   John simply refused to be offended. He was free to love Bill just the way he was. Bill was actually tearing up. \u201cYou know what?\u201d he went on. \u201cThat guy is really good to me. And he just treats everyone the same up here. All of us are the same. The interns, me, the stadium manager, everybody. He just treats us all like he loves us.\u201d Several seconds passed before he finally concluded, \u201cI still can\u2019t believe he did that for me.\u201d   I emailed John after the game and told him that I\u2019d just heard one of the greatest compliments ever, and it was about him: he treats us all the same. John simply refused to be offended. He was free to love Bill just the way he was. <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1012.95\"> My <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> instinct, and I\u2019m sure the instincts of many in Bill\u2019s life, was to tell Bill to shut up, or at least watch his mouth, or get his act together. Or maybe I could ignore him. But John? John went and made him a plaque.&#8220; <br \/><br \/>\nWhat would you do if  you&#8217;re around someone like Bill?   Would  you tell him to shut up? Would  you tell them to watch his  mouth? Would  you decide you are going to avoid having to work with Bill if you  can. Maybe you have  a neighbor named Bill.  Maybe you&#8217;ve got a coworker in the next seat over from you at the office. Maybe someone at school,  someone that&#8217;s just hard to be a Christian around because they just are so offensive to be around. Can we learn to let the love of Jesus cover wrongs instead of judging people so that they like to be with us?  Is that possible? Can we choose to love one another earnestly and just let some stuff go. <br \/><br \/>\nSome <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1080.71\">of <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> us were offended on the way to church today. You&#8217;re thinking about that right now. You were offended because somebody cut you off as you were trying to change lanes or someone didn&#8217;t pull out when the light turned green and you called him a name. We&#8217;re so quick to do the opposite of loving. Maybe we got offended by someone in your car on the way to church today. I don&#8217;t know. Can we choose to have the love of Christ so that we love one another earnestly in a way that overlooks offense. Yes, we can. This is the first instruction. <br \/><br \/>\n2. Be hospitable to one another without complaint.<br \/><br \/>\nHe says, love one another earnestly, the kind of love that covers wrongs.   And then,  be hospitable. We&#8217;re looking at verse nine.   \u201cShow hospitality to one another without grumbling.\u201d Hospitality was the mark of the Middle East. It&#8217;s a mark to this day. If you go to the Middle East today. <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1141.54\">If <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> they invite you into the house, they&#8217;re going to give you a coffee, probably in a small cup,  that you can stand the spoon up in and  it won&#8217;t even fall over.  There is  some seriously  strong coffee that you can get in the Middle East.   They will bring out some things to feed you because there&#8217;s still this kind of residual hospitality.   <br \/><br \/>\nPeter says just doing is  not good enough, you have to do it without grumbling. He puts that in because it was already the habit where he was growing up to be hospitable, but do it without grumbling. <br \/><br \/>\nNow,  we&#8217;re living in the south, I don&#8217;t know if you all knew that. So if you moved down here from the north, you&#8217;re in the south now, okay?   There&#8217;s this thing called \u201csouthern hospitality,\u201d right? Some of you are still trying to figure that out. You moved down here from New York or Michigan and you&#8217;re still trying to figure out this \u201csouthern hospitality\u201d <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1195.25\">thing.  <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>They invited you over to their house and when it was time for you to go, you couldn&#8217;t leave. They stood at the door with you, talking  to you.  Then they follow you down the walkway;  you&#8217;re still trying to leave.  Are  these people trying to go home with me?  You go to your car and they&#8217;re still talking to you.  Then, the whole family comes out, stands and waves goodbye to you as you back out.   Who are these people?  They&#8217;re southerners;  it\u2019s \u201csouthern hospitality.\u201d    <br \/><br \/>\nPeter says, That is  good that you are hospitable, but don&#8217;t go back in the house and grumble to your spouse that you thought they would never leave. You had those big southern smiles on your face, but the whole time you&#8217;re thinking that <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1242.01\">it&#8217;s <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> 11:00pm.  Don&#8217;t these people know it&#8217;s too late to stay out?  You grumbled about it. What we do, if we grumble, is we steal God&#8217;s glory and we steal our own joy. Even when we try to be hospitable, we can ruin it by complaining.  Peter says, \u201cshow hospitality.\u201d   <br \/><br \/>\nThe word,  \u201chospital,\u201d   comes from the same root. There were no hospitals until the 1st, 2nd and 3rd century;  Christians started realising nobody was taking care of the sick. The people didn&#8217;t have a place to go and they couldn\u2019t  take care of themselves. Christians started building hospitals. Most of the hospitals around the world were originally founded by Christians. Did you know that that comes from the idea of being hospitable, literally in the Greek?   It&#8217;s a Greek compound word. From \u03c6\u03af\u03bb\u03bf\u03c2 (phileo &#8211; brotherly love) and \u03be\u03ad\u03bd\u03bf\u03c2 (xenos &#8211; stranger or foreigner) &#8211; hospitable, generous to guests. <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1309.72\">It <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> literally means,  \u201cloving strangers, loving guests, loving people different from you.\u201d   That&#8217;s what that word, \u201chospitality,\u201d in the Greek literally means.  It means  to love people that are  different from you. <br \/><br \/>\nThe idea of taking care of people as your guests without complaining about it is what Peter is talking about here,  not grumbling about it. Romans 12:13 (NIV) \u201cShare with the Lord\u2019s people who are in need. Practice hospitality.\u201d  <br \/><br \/>\nSome of us need some practice; some of us  need to get better at it. When we first planted the church, I was about 32 or 33 years old. We first planned the church back in 1992. During that year, we decided to have a church picnic. We told everybody, \u201cOkay, the church is going to provide the dogs and  buns.  Everybody else needs to bring something to share. Bring enough for your family and enough to share and we&#8217;ll put it on the table together.\u201d   Everybody gets there.   A<span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1371.09\">family <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> of five would show up with a little container of baked beans or something. I started looking at the table and I turned to Robin and said to her, \u201cWe don&#8217;t have enough food!\u201d  Our families  didn&#8217;t know how to be hospitable. And so,  I slipped Robin some money and told her to  go to Kentucky Fried Chicken and  get some food to put on the table. That&#8217;s what we had to do. We had to,  out of our own pockets, take care of the church.   When we planted  the church, I was  one of the older people at  32 or 33 years old.   We attracted all these people in their twenties; there were more singles. They didn&#8217;t know how to be hospitable. At first,  I wanted to grumble about this.  In fact, I <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1414.34\">didn&#8217;t <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> just want to, I did grumble about it. Who are these people that think that was enough to share? And then,  it hit me;  no one had ever taught them  how to share. No one had taught him how to be hospitable and how to bring enough to share and to take care of other people. We recognized,  as a church, that we had to practice hospitality. We needed some hospitality rehearsals and we needed to grow together. How do you get better at something?  You practice it.  You open up your home.  Who does your home belong to? Have you made a decision,  Christian, to say, \u201cThis is God&#8217;s house, My house belongs to you, Lord.\u201d  What about your car? Is that your car? My identity is tied up in that car. No, it&#8217;s God&#8217;s car. So, if somebody needs a ride, you start thinking about what you have as tools of ministry. We can be hospitable towards people, <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1471.37\">We <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> can take care of people, and besides, you never know who you&#8217;re taking care of.   <br \/><br \/>\nHebrews 13:2 (ESV) \u201cDo not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.\u201d  You just never know who you&#8217;re being hospitable to;  treat them all like Jesus.  Jesus says in Matthew 15: 35-40, \u201cFor I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink,  I was a stranger and you welcomed me, 36  I was naked and you clothed me,  I was sick and you visited me,  I was in prison and you came to me.\u2019 37 Then the righteous will answer him, saying, \u2018Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you drink? 38 And when did we see you a stranger and welcome you, or naked and clothe you? 39 And when did we see you sick or in prison and visit you?\u2019 40 And the King will answer them, Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers,6 you did it to me.\u2019  <br \/><br \/>\nWe take care of one another as if we were caring for Jesus himself and we do it without grumbling.  Grumbling ruins it.  Philippians 2:14-15 (ESV) 14 \u201cDo all things without grumbling or disputing, 15 that you may be blameless and innocent, children of <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1527.91\">of <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> God without blemish in the midst of a crooked and twisted generation, among whom you shine as lights in the world.\u201d \n If you want to give God the glory, you can&#8217;t grumble about it. You have to have a wholehearted joy about it. I can&#8217;t help it. It just comes out sometimes. But the truth is, \u201cI can do all things through Christ who gives me strength.\u201d   God,  help me to stop grumbling.  <br \/><br \/>\nYou might not know when you&#8217;re grumbling. But if you&#8217;re married, your spouse will tell you, \u201cYou are being grumpy today.\u201d   Of course, I say back to her, \u201cI am not.\u201d  Maybe <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1580.75\">I <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> am. Your spouse will help you with that.  Then, you have to say to her,  \u201c I&#8217;m sorry,  you&#8217;re right.\u201d  God hates grumbling because grumbling is the opposite of gratitude.  God loves gratitude.    We can stop grumbling and we can learn to be hospitable. <br \/><br \/>\nIn Rosaria Butterfield\u2019s book, The Gospel Comes with a House Key: Practicing Radically Ordinary Hospitality in Our Post Christian World, she articulates a gospel-minded hospitality that she says was essential to her own conversion. She was a tenured professor at Syracuse University, a lesbian feminist activist and an unlikely convert, when she was invited to a small group at Ken and Floy Smith\u2019s home.\u201cFor two years, I was loved and welcomed by a Christian community that I mocked, despised, and rejected. I accepted them when it worked for me and rejected them all the other times. There is simply no way I would have walked into a church if I had <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1656.03\">not <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> a genuine friendship with them. I met with them once a week. At their home, the door was wide open. People were always in and out of the house\u2014people from church and people not from church. Heated, genuine conversation would happen. People would speak honestly, and tears would flow. But it was different because Ken would open the Bible and sing from the Psalter, and then he would pray. It was so disarming; I couldn\u2019t help but go back. It was in this context of hospitality that Ken brought the church to me, because it was impossible for me to get to the church without the bridge of somebody\u2019s home.\u201d  She writes about this and how she experienced life change  through Jesus, as a result of someone showing hospitality to her, even though she admittedly was far from God.  <br \/><br \/>\nWe have a saying in our church, \u201cBuild a bridge of trust that will bear the weight of truth.\u201d   Build a relationship. Why not use your home? Why not <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1727.6\">talk <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> to your neighbors? Why not begin immediately? You know one way you can begin immediately is  you can follow the \u201cthree minute rule.\u201d   We don&#8217;t talk about the \u201cthree minute rule\u201d  as much as we used to.   Some of you have been with us for a while and  remember it at the end of this service.   Instead of running straight to your best friends to talk, go meet somebody you&#8217;ve never met before. It might be a little awkward when you first do it. You might go up to somebody and say, \u201cHey, I don&#8217;t think you and I have ever met. Have you just started coming here?\u201d  They may say,  \u201cI&#8217;ve been coming here for five years.\u201d   It will be kind of awkward because you&#8217;re just starting to reach out and talk to people that you don&#8217;t already know. But as you practice it, as you practice hospitality, you will improve and talk to people.  <br \/><br \/>\nHere&#8217;s the thing, who&#8217;s the church?  Is the church <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1779.39\">a<i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>geographic place? No, the church is  wherever we are, we just happen to be meeting in  this old movie theater that we bought and fixed up some years ago.   We are the church, you are the church.   If people visit our church, if there&#8217;s going to be hospitality here, we have to offer it. Help us,  so that when people come here, they know that we love them and that we&#8217;re hospitable. <br \/><br \/>\nI remember a time when my wife and I visited a church when we were newlyweds, we hadn&#8217;t been married long. We were living in the Roanoke, Virginia area in those days and we attended this church.  I loved the preaching; the preaching was awesome.  I really thought tht this might be the church we should start going to and we needed to get to know some people. We would stand in the lobby and wait for somebody to talk to us, but nobody did. And then,  we would  stand out in <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1831.45\">the <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> parking lot next to our car  to see if anybody would ask us to go somewhere to get lunch, but nobody did.  I really liked  the preaching, but  Robin kept saying to me, \u201cThey don&#8217;t seem very friendly.\u201d  We started going to another church and the preaching wasn&#8217;t quite as good and the building wasn&#8217;t quite as impressive, but the people were hospitable.  There was this one guy who followed me around saying, \u201cHave you met such and such?\u201d   This guy took me on as his personal project. I had to go back. This guy wouldn&#8217;t let go of me <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1875.55\">. <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> His gift was hospitality. <br \/><br \/>\nPeople make a decision about whether or not they want to come back to this church before they ever get into the worship place. They make it out in the parking lot.   They make it out in the lobby.  Some of you come in spite of me and  my preaching because someone here loves you and is  hospitable to you. Let&#8217;s be hospitable, church, without grumbling. <br \/><br \/>\n3. Minister to one another with words and service.<br \/><br \/>\nWe are in verses 10 and 11;  we&#8217;re getting to that third \u201cone another.\u201d   We&#8217;ve covered the first two.  In verse 10,  we read this, \u201cAs each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God&#8217;s varied grace.\u201d   \u201cAs each has received a gift, use it to serve one another\u201d  would serve, in many translations,  as the word \u201cminister\u201d to one another because, guess what? I&#8217;m not your minister, I&#8217;m your pastor and I&#8217;m equipping you to do the ministry. We studied that a couple of weeks ago. Pastor Jonathan Minter preached that sermon from the <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1939.92\">previous <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> chapters.   <br \/><br \/>\nEphesians 4:11-12 (ESV) 11 \u201cAnd he gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherds and teachers, 12 to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ.\u201d  This scripture  talks about every member being a  minister,  being equipped by the pastors of the church. You&#8217;re the ministers,  so what&#8217;s your job? It is according to your gift; as you have received a gift, use it. Be a good steward of it. In other words, don&#8217;t waste it;  use it. <br \/><br \/>\nHe gives two categories of gifts. He says, there&#8217;s all kinds of gifts. There&#8217;s all kinds of varied grace, there&#8217;s varieties of giftedness, so use yours.  He gives two categories. He says,  we have  speaking gifts and we have  serving gifts.  You can go look at the list of gifts.   We&#8217;re not going to do that this morning.   You can go to 1 Corinthians 12 -14 and get a long list. Romans 12 has a list there,  where Paul goes into greater detail. He starts talking about all these different gifts. There&#8217;s about 21 of them that <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1990.26\">he <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> lists. <br \/><br \/>\nPeter gives you two categories:  speaking gifts and serving gifts.  Whichever type you have,  use it to build each other up and  to minister to each other. Those gifts were not given to you for you only;  they were given for the body,  which is the church. Use them.   Don&#8217;t waste them.   Be good stewards.   Be managers of what God has given you. <br \/><br \/>\n1 Peter 4:11 (NLT) \u201cDo you have the gift of speaking? Then speak as though God himself were speaking through you.\u201d \u201cWhoever speaks as one who speaks oracles of God.\u201d  You&#8217;re probably reading that  wondering, What are oracles?   It has this idea of having heard from God;  having heard God&#8217;s word speak out of that. If you&#8217;ve been given a speaking <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2056.48\">gift <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> for others, don&#8217;t waste words with your own words.   Use the words God has given you for one another. <br \/><br \/>\nWhere are you going to get those words?  We highly recommend this book (Bible).  You can&#8217;t put out what you haven&#8217;t put in. Put these words from the Bible  in. Then,  when someone&#8217;s in need or someone needs encouragement, you have words that you received here. <br \/><br \/>\nThe other thing you can do is you can listen to people and say,  \u201cHoly Spirit I don&#8217;t know what to say to this person. This person just lost a loved one. This person just got news that they&#8217;re facing cancer.   You heard in Blake and Claudia Rhudy&#8217;s testimony that that happened to them. As a result, it became a ministry.   Now,  they feel called to help others who have received that news and desire to help them get through it. <br \/><br \/>\nYou may say,  Okay, I&#8217;ve got these words. I&#8217;ve been studying the word of God, so I have the oracles of God. I&#8217;m learning them. But now which ones do <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2112.7\">I <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> say?   Serve one another by  ministering to another with words that build others up. How powerful is your ability to bless other people and apply it to them, using God&#8217;s word. So he says,  \u201cwhoever speaks as one who speaks oracles of God.\u201d  I like the NLT here.  \u201cAs though God Himself were speaking through you.\u201d   Is that not humbling to consider,  that the spirit lives in us and we let Him speak?   It often means to be quiet for a minute and listen. As someone&#8217;s talking to you, you  can pray, \u201cHoly Spirit tell me what to say.  Tell me if I just need to be quiet.\u201d  <br \/><br \/>\nHow many of you have been in that funeral line during  the time of visitation?  There&#8217;s the family;  some of them are crying and  some of them are smiling but people are talking to them.   and you&#8217;re thinking,   I wonder what they&#8217;re saying to the people, I wonder what they&#8217;re saying. I wonder what I&#8217;m going <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2176.81\">to <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> say. What if you did this, ask the Lord,  Lord just help me to be fully present,  listening to You and listening to them because you know what matters most to people that are grieving is  that You&#8217;re there.   They won\u2019t remember all the words that everybody said to them. You don&#8217;t have to be a genius to shake their hand, look them in the eye and say,  \u201cI&#8217;ve been praying for you.\u201d   Listen to see what they say.   If they want to talk about their loved one, just listen.  Maybe,  as you&#8217;re listening,  say, Holy Spirit,  there&#8217;s something I need to say right here.  Maybe something will  pop  in your head.   Hey,  can we  get together for coffee next week?   I just love to hear more about your brother.  \nI want you to think about the adventure of being gifted by God to be His spokesperson into people&#8217;s lives and  to minister to one another with words.   I said this <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2239.68\">before <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> that pastor Jonathan preached from Ephesians 4, \u201che gave the apostles,  the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherds and teachers to equip the saints for the work of the ministry for building up the body of Christ.\u201d  We are called to be ministers to one another. <br \/><br \/>\nI&#8217;ve noticed that people are especially open to ministry and  the gospel when they have a \u201cD day.\u201d  \u201cD days\u201d are deaths,  disease, divorce, being dismissed from a job or deployment.  \u201cD day\u201d  is when we can speak words, but we can also serve meals. We can help people move, we can help with babysitting.  When the words and the deeds come together from God through us.   People will often hear what we&#8217;re saying about the gospel that they never could have heard any other way. We&#8217;re called to that. I&#8217;ve <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2307.41\">heard <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> people say,  Even my own family has not cared for me and loved on me the way my small group just did or the way my church has.  This only happens when God&#8217;s people use the gifts that God has given us to speak and to serve the way He&#8217;s called us. <br \/><br \/>\nWill you use,  as a good steward,  what God has given you? When you do, there&#8217;s a purpose for it. Speak the words that God is giving you and then serve according to the strength that God supplies. In other words, even when you&#8217;re tired, ask God for strength because often those opportunities come when you&#8217;re tired.   Some of us are just perpetually tired. It&#8217;s a demanding world we live in. But yet,  God.   \u201cI can do all things through Christ who gives me strength.\u201d   Strengthen me to do that thing to serve people for Your sake and for Your glory because that&#8217;s the purpose,  in order that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ.<br \/><br \/>\nPeter  breaks into a benediction at the end.   He<span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2374.42\">shouts <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> praises to God. When the church starts looking like this, loving each other so earnestly that it covers a multitude of sins and showing so much hospitality,  wholeheartedly without grumbling and we start carrying out the gifts towards one another, the whole world sees the glory of God.  Peter shouts,  \u201cto him belong glory and dominion forever and ever, Amen.\u201d  He has to close with this  benediction.   He has to shout because this is what the church looks like in all of its glory. Let&#8217;s make the prayer of Christ and John chapter 17 come true, let&#8217;s cooperate with it. God&#8217;s going to do it. Let&#8217;s look like we&#8217;re together because there&#8217;s three \u201cone anothers\u201d  here, but did you know there are 100 of them in the New  Testament.  \u201cYou can&#8217;t do the one anothers without one another.\u201d  We need each other.   Will you decide today,  to earnestly love one another, stop being <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2441.81\">so <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> easily offended,  to show hospitality without complaining and to serve one another?   Minister to one another in word and deed.   <br \/><br \/>\nLet&#8217;s pray.   Lord, thank You for Your word. I pray, first of all,  for that person that really got here on a thin thread today. They barely made it today, but as they&#8217;re listening, they feel so attracted to a relationship with You,  Lord. If that&#8217;s you, my friend and you&#8217;ve decided today that you  want to be a Christ follower, it begins with a prayer of  faith,making a decision to do it. It begins by just saying, \u201cI believe and then I receive.\u201d  Pray with me, I believe in You,Jesus.   I believe You died on the cross for my sins. I believe You were raised from the grave and that You live today. I believe it and I receive You as my Lord and Savior.   I give my life to You. Come into my life and forgive me of my sin.  Make me a child of God. I want You to be my Lord and <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2505.61\">Savior <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>. If you&#8217;re expressing your faith right now, and that&#8217;s what prayer is, it&#8217;s just talking to God,  He&#8217;s ready to save you and receive you as His own child. Others are here and you&#8217;ve done that. You know Him as your Lord and Savior, but you&#8217;re not getting along with someone. There&#8217;s someone at work, someone in your neighborhood, someone in your family, a spouse, a child or  a parent. There&#8217;s someone and you&#8217;re easily offended. Would you give that to the Lord right now and say, Lord,  help me to have that kind of fervent love, that earnest love that covers a multitude of sins. Lord help me to be hospitable and to reach out to others and help them.   Help me to speak words like they&#8217;re Your words, Lord,  to others and to serve others according to Your strength. Lord help me today. I repent of those places where I&#8217;ve grumbled and where I&#8217;ve been judgmental. Lord help me.   In Jesus\u2019 Name. Amen.\n\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Do you want to glorify God with your life? You can\u2019t do it by making life about you. When we make life about us, we attempt to steal the glory, the credit, the praise, for ourselves. But when we make life about loving and serving one another, according to the power and gifting of the Holy Spirit, God gets the glory.<\/p>\n<p>In Peter\u2019s first epistle to the Church scattered in Asia Minor, he gave them instructions on how to glorify God together. We can obey these instructions to glorify God together.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":9853,"template":"","tags":[],"series":[2830],"scripture-book":[1327],"scripture-chapter":[1337],"speaker":[2007],"class_list":["post-9868","message","type-message","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","series-better-together","scripture-book-1-peter","scripture-chapter-1337","speaker-gary-combs"],"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/message\/9868","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/message"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/message"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/message\/9868\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/9853"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=9868"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=9868"},{"taxonomy":"series","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/series?post=9868"},{"taxonomy":"scripture-book","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/scripture-book?post=9868"},{"taxonomy":"scripture-chapter","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/scripture-chapter?post=9868"},{"taxonomy":"speaker","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/speaker?post=9868"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}