Skeptics – Josh.org https://www.josh.org Josh McDowell Ministry Wed, 01 Nov 2023 15:26:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://www.josh.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/607/2021/06/JMM_favicon-150x150.png Skeptics – Josh.org https://www.josh.org 32 32 Doesn’t Believing in God Require Faith? https://www.josh.org/doesnt-believing-in-god-require-faith-2/ Tue, 20 Jun 2023 01:55:58 +0000 https://www.josh.org/?p=78470

Let’s first agree on what faith is. The Bible doesn’t say, “Throw your mind away and believe in someone or something blindly.” Rather, it says, “Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1). The two important words there are assurance and conviction, which stem from personal knowledge. You have faith that planes are safe, for example, because of FAA rules that keep them flying. You had faith in a parent who cared well for you. You have faith that the sun will set and rise. The Israelites put their faith in God after seeing Moses perform numerous miracles.

Our faith in Christ grows from our knowledge of him. Despite not being able to touch, hear, or see him, you can trust that he loves you and is working for your good by getting to know his character, his heart, and his desires for you. This knowledge allows you to draw close and dig deep during the times your faith is tested by the hardships of life.

Scripture tells us, “These trials are only to test your faith, to show that it is strong and pure. It is being tested as fire tests and purifies gold – and your faith is far more precious to God than pure gold” (1 Peter 1:7). How are you handling those fires?

Each test, even the ones you fail, are drawing you closer to reliance on God’s unwavering love. Your faith is allowing God to transform your life – and the lives of those watching your Christian walk.

Question: Why does the bible say it’s impossible to please God without faith? (Hebrews 11:6)
Question: What area(s) of your life are easiest and hardest, when it comes to trusting God fully?

Content adapted from Josh and Sean McDowell’s book, 77 FAQs about God and the Bible.

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The Mountain-Moving Power of Faith https://www.josh.org/mountain-power-of-faith/ https://www.josh.org/mountain-power-of-faith/#respond Fri, 10 Mar 2023 19:00:06 +0000 https://www.josh.org/?p=74654

Let’s talk about faith.

Faith is an important and recurring theme in the Bible. Believers are called to put their faith in God’s word. But what is faith, and why is it so important that we develop it? Does faith change our lives?

The Bible provides what I consider to be the definitive answer. Hebrews 11:1 tells us, “Faith is the reality of what is hoped for, the proof of what is not seen.” Faith is believing in God’s power, and taking comfort in his promises.

We gain mountain-moving power when we place our lives in God’s hands!

feed your faith

Faith Is Trusting God’s Power

In Matthew 17:14-20, the disciples are unable to drive out a demon from a man’s son until Jesus shows them how it’s done. When his disciples ask why they couldn’t drive out the demon, Jesus tells them it’s because they lacked faith. If they had faith the size of a tiny mustard seed, he adds, they could command a mountain to move, and it would do so.

We find the power of faith also demonstrated in Matthew 8:5-13, when a Roman centurion runs up to Jesus to ask that his servant be healed. Jesus asks the centurion if he wants him to accompany him to his house. The centurion demonstrates his faith by replying, “I am not worthy to have you come under my roof. But just say the word and my servant will be healed.”Jesus marvels at his faith, and does as he asks. The centurion returns home, to find that his servant was healed at the exact time the centurion was speaking with Jesus.


Faith is Trusting God’s Goodness

Doubt can be considered an enemy of faith (Matthew 17:14-20). When looking around, it can feel like the world is crashing down around you. But God hasn’t left us alone. And he’s given us tools to help us keep our faith strong.

God’s Word tells the story of his goodness and guiding hand throughout history. Even when things fell apart, God still had a plan. And nothing can thwart it. One of my favorite verses is Romans 8:28, which reminds us, “We know that all things work together for the good of those who love God, who are called according to his purpose.”

God’s power is demonstrated through his creation. The natural world is so intently and complexly designed that scientists still struggle to comprehend much of it. Psalm 19:1 says, “The heavens declare the glory of God, and the expanse proclaims the work of his hands.”We can have faith in God’s power, because we can trust in his goodness.


Keep Feeding Your Faith

If something isn’t fed, it dies. The same is true for our faith. So we must continuously strengthen it. I keep my faith strong by studying my Bible and reviewing my favorite encouraging Bible verses, some of which I listed earlier. Praying is another way I keep my faith strong. Prayer helps me to talk to God, which deepens my relationship with him. God wants to be in a personal relationship with each of us.

How do we deepen our relationship with him? With faith, time, and communication. We build our faith in God as we deepen our trust in his goodness and power.

Are you actively building your faith? In what ways has God proven his goodness and power to you? In what ways have you demonstrated to God that you have faith in him?


NEXT STEPS

> Interested in helping people to know God personally? Get started here.
> Need prayer? Contact us. We would love to pray for you!


GUEST BLOGGER CLAYTON THOMAS CARTER, A HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT IN PLANO, TEXAS, IS PASSIONATE ABOUT ENCOURAGING THE KNOWLEDGE OF A BIBLICAL WORLDVIEW. HE ENJOYS PLAYING TRUMPET AND SERVING AT HIS CHURCH.
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Peace Amid the Noise https://www.josh.org/peace-amid-noise/ https://www.josh.org/peace-amid-noise/#respond Mon, 21 Nov 2022 19:15:45 +0000 https://www.josh.org/?p=72102

Does the noise of the world get to you, too?

Living in an age where, because of the internet, everything can be shared on a whim, we are constantly exposed to all the different views and opinions of the world. It all can feel very confusing, especially if we’re teens struggling to figure out our path in life.

As someone living with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), sometimes all the noise can really get to me. But when I find myself overwhelmed, I know there is one solid foundation that I can always turn to for clear direction: the Bible.

Peace Amid the Noise

The Bible is the Word of God, given to humanity so that we might know God’s character, His will, and who we are in Him, through Christ. His Word details the creation of the universe and humanity (Genesis 1 and 2), the way to salvation (John 3), and historical events in which we can see God at work. Its expansive writings are amazing and encouraging — and convicting. It’s great stuff.

What is it about the Bible that makes it a worthy foundation for our lives? The Bible’s reliability is based on two facts: One, God is good and wants to guide us in our daily lives. Two, the Bible is history, so we are reading the experiences of other real, flawed people. We get to see how God worked in their lives.

When I was a kid, I needed the guidance and wisdom of my parents to gain knowledge as I physically matured. God, our Creator and spiritual Father, gives us guidance and wisdom to mature spiritually. Proverbs 3:5-6 tells us: “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not rely on your own understanding; in all your ways know Him, and He will make your paths straight.” James 1:5 adds: “Now if any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God — who gives to all generously and ungrudgingly — and it will be given to him.”

Due to my sinful nature, I am prone to faltering and disobeying God. It’s the same with you, too. But in His goodness, God shows us how to live well. His Word is like a mirror: It helps us to become aware of our sin, to see our need for repentance, and to turn to God for His ceaseless love and forgiveness. We can live with that assurance.

History is a great teacher. It is a blessing to be able to read the Bible and learn from the failure and victories of real people — from Adam and Eve, to the Jewish prophets and kings, to the committed disciples who spread the Gospel message far and wide. In reading their stories, we get to see the heart of God, and His understanding and patience for us. He knows we’re human!

Though I am still in my teens, I recognize that daily life can feel like standing in the midst of a storm. But every storm has an eye; a place of peace, despite the chaos. The Bible is that eye for me. The quiet space where I can feel God’s peace, and where I can gain wisdom and confidence.

What “storm” is causing you distress right now?  

Today, open your Bible. Ask God to meet with you, and to provide you with peace and clarity as you read His Word. God is not distant; He is always near. His Word grounds us in the midst of noise and chaos.


NEXT STEPS

> Interested in helping people to know God personally? Get started here.
> Need prayer? Contact us. We would love to pray for you!


GUEST BLOGGER CLAYTON THOMAS CARTER, A STUDENT IN PLANO, TEXAS, IS PASSIONATE ABOUT ENCOURAGING THE KNOWLEDGE OF A BIBLICAL WORLDVIEW. HE ENJOYS PLAYING TRUMPET AND SERVING AT HIS CHURCH.
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Finding God in Scripture https://www.josh.org/finding-god-in-scripture/ Thu, 06 Oct 2022 16:05:56 +0000 https://sites.josh.org/main/?p=72587

The Bible discusses many topics, from our human limitations and weaknesses, to the nature of life, to the sublime magnificence of our God. Much more than a descriptive list of facts, Scripture hints at the truth of things – the essence and purpose of God’s creation – the things that are real beyond our human interpretation and perception.

I read Scripture because I want to understand who God is, and what He wants of me. I don’t fully understand all of the Bible, but I have been finding God as I linger in it. Perhaps the way I connect with God in His Word can work for you, too, if you’re struggling to connect. 

Why God? blog #hurthealedwhole

Why Read God’s Word

It’s frustrating that we can’t fully understand all that we read in the Bible, for numerous reasons. We often bring our subjective lens to the text, which can change the intended meaning. Or we take the text out of context, and end up making wrong assumptions. But it’s often because we hurriedly skim as we read, rather than taking the time to ponder, because we want to check “Read Bible” off our busy daily to-do list.

We can fix these issues. But a bigger reason we can feel a disconnect with the Bible is because we lack God’s knowledge and perspective. Which can make reading the Bible feel like work. But God repeatedly tells us to dive into His Word, with delight, because we need its knowledge to have a firm understanding of what Christianity is all about.

First, Scripture tells us who God is. Second, the Bible tells us who we are — and why Christ selflessly chose to die for us on the cross. God’s Word gives us peace, which we need in a world that feels increasingly anxious. As 1 Corinthians 13:12 reminds us, “For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known.”

Finding God in Scripture is for our benefit. So how can we best grasp God’s truths? There’s no right way. But what I do know: “Get in, get out” doesn’t work with the Bible. Finding God requires that we build the habit of lingering with Him to really know Him.


Finding God As I Linger 

God chose to give me an engineer’s mind. That means that I approach any task or problem from numerous angles, with various methods, as I seek out the best solution.

So when I read the Bible, my logical brain kicks into overdrive. I don’t read just one translation, but many translations — which I compare! I also research words in Hebrew or Greek, to better understand subtleties and nuances in the original text. I also read commentaries, just to learn what respected theologians think. Like I said, I’m a geek! And I know I have a lot to learn.

But I can be so analytical and methodical in my approach that I often miss the overall message. It’s like observing a painting with such focused scrutiny, that I can only see the brushstrokes and blobs of paint, not the subject matter. 

Especially if I read the words silently in my head. My geeky brain not only filters out the overall theme, but much of the poetry and beauty of the words. Or my thoughts wander, or the words knock around in my head, without making sense.

So here’s what I do: I read Scripture out loud. It’s as if, in the timbre and nuances of my voice, the poignant request of my yearning heart for God amplifies. I feel an emotional connection with God, and am able to fully focus on what He wants me to learn.

As I speak His Word aloud, God’s presence pierces my heart with a deep assurance and certainty. Not a logical certainty, not anything I can put into words or grasp with my mind, but certain nonetheless — fair and true and deeply wonderful. I am seen. I am loved. I am known.

My soul opens, and I am able to catch incandescent glimpses of our God’s magnificence. My tears of joy are the truest response of my heart’s overflowing gratitude. I am blown away that the Creator of the universe wants to be known by me!


See If It Works For You

So, that’s my daily practice, if you want to give it a try. As you read God’s Word aloud, imagine that you hear Him speaking. Read slowly. Savor the words. Emotionally connect with the message. There is always something that God wants to reveal to us, when we give Him our pause to do so.

We discern the ineffable beauty of God more with our open and surrendered hearts than we do with our logical minds. Finding God becomes a sacred event when we get in His Word and allow Him to connect with us. It doesn’t matter that we don’t understand everything in it. Our walk with God is about our journey, not just our destination.


>>> God wants a relationship with you. Click here to learn more!


Guest blogger Dan Muenchau is a retired engineer who enjoys showing the love of God to others.
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I Am Who I Am: God’s Most Important Name https://www.josh.org/i-am-who-i-am-gods-important-name/ https://www.josh.org/i-am-who-i-am-gods-important-name/#respond Wed, 28 Sep 2022 17:47:59 +0000 https://www.josh.org/?p=71201

Names are significant. It’s always a big deal when someone knows your name, which is why we all try to be better at remembering them. I meet a lot of people, and I hate forgetting and having to say, “Hey, you!” or “Good to see you, man!” Remembering a name is a big deal, and not just because it makes it convenient to get someone’s attention. A name is a revealer of character, like when someone says, “Oh, she’s got a really good name in the industry.” It’s not just what you call someone, but what they are.

The same goes for God. The Bible calls Him by many names. Each has a story, and each reveals a different aspect of God’s character. In this post I highlight what may be the most important name for God, which reveals His loving character. 

Yahweh: I Am Who I Am

The most important name for God is Yahweh, which translates to “I am who I am.” This name, which God called Himself, shows up with one of the most well-known Bible characters, Moses.

You may know that as a Hebrew baby, Moses was spared from infanticide that the Egyptian pharaoh ordered to curb the population of the Israelites, Egypt’s slave labor. His mom puts him in a basket and floats him down the Nile River, where Moses is found by one of Pharaoh’s daughters and raised as an Egyptian. As a young adult, Moses connects to his Israeli heritage and tries to ingratiate himself to them by killing an Egyptian abusing a Hebrew slave. It doesn’t work. The Israelites are like, “We don’t know you.” And the Egyptians are angry about the murder. So Moses runs away, ending up in another country, where he lives as a shepherd with his father-in-law, a pagan priest. 

One day Moses sees a bush that’s on fire, but not burning up. Curious, he edges closer, and God speaks to him. God tells Moses that He is going to rescue the Israelites from centuries of slavery. Moses is like, “Cool, thanks for letting me know. Glad you are doing that.” Then God tells him that He’s going to use Moses to make it happen. Moses has some objections. He says, “If I go to the Israelites, they are going to say, ‘What is the name of the God who told you this?’ What do I say?” Because Moses grew up as an Egyptian, he was familiar with hundreds of gods. So which one is this?

God tells Moses, “Yahweh.” I am who I am.


Yahweh: Not Our Build-A-Bear

At first glance, Yahweh, I am who I am, doesn’t seem to reveal much. But the name actually does.

First, it reveals that God is a personal being. He is not just some force, like the Star Wars, “May the force be with you” thing. This is a big deal to understand. People who don’t know Jesus view God as an impersonal force in the universe, and will often say things like, “The universe drew us together” or “I hope the universe will guide me to make the best decision.”

This sounds nice, but when you think about it, an impersonal force is a very low hope. It’s no different than blind luck. God is not the universe; He is the personal being who has always existed. He created the universe. He is a person who desires a relationship with His creation, you and me, which is what Christianity is all about.

Second, the name tells us that God is who He is apart from our opinion about who He is. God exists outside of our imagination. He isn’t what we want Him to be — or who we are afraid He is. He is Yahweh, regardless of what we think about Him. He is I am who I am.

When I was thinking about this, a birthday idea came to mind for my granddaughter, who is about to turn two. I thought about those Build-A-Bears, and I decided to go online and build a bear for her. But God is not a Build-A-Bear. He is the eternal God who exists beyond our opinion of Him.

He created bears — and you and me. So our job is to relate to Him, not make Him in our image. When people say, “Oh, my God would ever do that,” or “I can only believe in a God who only does X,” they’re acting like God is their Build-A-Bear. But He’s not. He’s I am who I am.


Yahweh’s Unchanging Nature

God chooses eight descriptors of His essence, which all point to a God that sounds too good to be true. These words describe not WHAT God does, but WHO He is at His core. His essence:

Compassionate
We don’t have to try to catch God on a good day. He’s not moody; sometimes mean, other times gracious. He is always compassionate. The Hebrew word is related to the word for a woman’s womb, capturing the kind of emotion a mother feels for the baby she carries. God is saying, “I am not some distant deity who doesn’t care about you. Every ounce of My being is in love with you and concerned for you.

Gracious
Another strong and good aspect of God’s character, this lets us know that He is far more generous toward us than we can imagine. He is not stingy or stodgy. He is a giver, especially of what we don’t deserve. 

Slow To Get Angry
God does not have His finger on the trigger. He is patient, and gives us a really long rope. That’s a very good thing, because we wouldn’t last a second if He were a hothead.

Overflowing with Love and Always Faithful
What fills God up is love, and what you will find when you come to Him is love overflowing your direction. His love is without limit; like His faithfulness, it won’t run out. We live in a world with very little loyalty and endurance in relationships, but God sticks with us, and will outlast our latest foolishness. 

Unwavering, Committed Love
The Hebrew word chesed is one of the most important words in the Bible, and God uses it all the time to describe Himself. It’s a covenantal love, like marriage, based on a promise that He will never break. It is an irrational commitment to another person, to do what is best and to stick with that person no matter what. 

Forgiving and Just
God is slow to get angry, and quick to forgive. He doesn’t hold on to grudges. He’s not passive aggressive. He doesn’t bring up stuff from the past. But He is also just, because love demands justice. Yet His justice is not a contradiction to His love. His justice and mercy come together at the cross of Jesus, where God took on our deserved punishment, to remove the guilt of our sin. At the cross His mercy triumphs over justice. He graciously gives us the choice of knowing His justice or His grace. 


The Ones That Jesus Loves

God’s unchanging nature is set; we can’t custom-design God. Which is a good thing, because His love for you and me is way bigger than we can possibly comprehend. Even now, after two decades of pastoring, God continues to show me that He’s way more than I imagine.

I did a sabbatical at the beginning of the year, which was richly life-giving and life-changing for me. I went into it with some questions I wanted to pursue with God. But as I tried to take them to Him, what I got back was a sense of “Great questions, but I don’t really care about that right now. Let’s worry about all that later. I just want you to know my heart for you right now.” And that’s what happened. I was overwhelmed by God’s heart, in a deep way that surpasses book knowledge.

So this is my hope for us today: That God enables us to deeply experience His character. His love.

I don’t know how your past has shaped your view of God. Perhaps you see Him as a distant deity who sits back and watches you suffer without concern. That’s not who I am who I am is. Maybe you view God as an angry judge who is just waiting to give you what you deserve. That’s not who Yahweh is. If you’re wondering how He feels about you, the good news is that you don’t have to wonder. He loves you. He is for you. He has compassion and grace and unwavering faithfulness toward you. And nothing you can ever do can ever change that. 

I love how John, one of Jesus’ twelve disciples, refers to himself when he mentions himself in the New Testament book, John. John never refers to himself by his name or in the first person. Instead, he calls himself  “The one that Jesus loved.” John was so overwhelmed by God’s love for him, that this became his identity. We can make it our identity, too.

The apostle Paul offers a prayer in the New Testament book of Ephesians for his friends in a church he started in the city of Ephesus. This prayer has become my constant prayer, for you and me:

For this reason I kneel before the Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth derives its name. I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.


>> Who is Jesus? FREE download: Read the first chapter of Josh McDowell’s bestseller, More Than a Carpenter.

>> God wants a relationship with you! Click here to learn more.


Guest blogger Jeff Jones is the senior pastor of Chase Oaks Church, based in Plano, Texas. This post is part of Jeff’s sermon series, “Names of God: Our Invitation to Know God Better.” You can watch the sermon series by clicking here.
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Talking to People, Like Jesus Did https://www.josh.org/talking-to-people-like-jesus-did/ https://www.josh.org/talking-to-people-like-jesus-did/#respond Thu, 22 Sep 2022 19:09:42 +0000 https://www.josh.org/?p=71198

I can still recall the precious moment that I devoted myself to Christ. I remember becoming totally sold-out, convinced that Jesus rose, saved me from my sins, and loves me forever. From that point on, spreading His message of salvation became so meaningful to me that it had to be my life’s purpose. I wanted nothing more than for people to accept the historical and spiritual truths of the Christian faith.

But early on, as I began talking to people about Christ, I found that most people were not receptive to the message. To my surprise, many conversations ended quite abruptly. I couldn’t understand why people could so easily reject the Gospel message that I deeply treasured.

How could they not love hearing about Jesus, especially after what He did for them on the cross? Was I the problem?

talking to people

Talking to People About Jesus, But Doing it Wrong

After this kept happening, I realized that although I was sharing the TRUTH of Jesus, I was getting in the way. I thought people were rejecting the truth of Jesus because they were rejecting Him. Turns out, they couldn’t stand talking to me. I began to realize that it was the way I was talking to people about the Gospel message that was the problem. 

I’ve heard Josh McDowell say, “Truth doesn’t change, but the way you present it better change.” 

This struck at the heart of my problem. I wasn’t adapting my message to my audience. I was talking to people in the same tone, convinced that the unchanging truth of Christ meant that I also could be unchanging in how I spoke to others. I came across like an insensitive robot! My passion for Jesus came out all wrong. Perhaps you can relate?

I wanted people to get excited about the truth of Christ. I wanted to draw them to Jesus, but my way of going about it pushed them away!

Reading my Bible one day, I was overjoyed to finally make the connection with how I could change. Ephesians 4:15 says this: “Rather, speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ.” Sometimes the simplest verses are so powerful. It was crystal clear — I was talking to people about the truth, but not with love.

What does it really mean to speak in love? The next part of the verse clues us in: “grow up in every way…into Christ.”

When we’re young, we often look up to certain people that we decide we want to be like when we grow up. So we start acting like them. We might even dress like them. As a kid, I really admired Spiderman. I LOVED wearing my Spiderman costume! As children of God, growing into looking like Jesus means that we try to imitate Who He is.

As children of God, growing into looking like Jesus means that we try to imitate Him.That’s the key to speaking the truth in love. Instead of trying to measure up against a list of “do’s” and “don’ts” or simply “be nicer,” I opened my Bible to Jesus. I soaked up His example like a sponge, just as I did when I tried to be like Spiderman.

When I allowed Jesus to become the object of my admiration, I not only began to naturally imitate Him, He began to change me. This is why spending time with Christ in prayer, reading about Him in the Bible, and learning from others about Him is essential.

When I simply enjoyed Jesus, I began to deeply admire Him — and wanted to show up like He does. As His Word changed me, I slowly began to talk to people about His truth in love. His love.


Jesus Connected With Each Person

One particular Bible passage that deepened my admiration of Christ is about a woman highlighted in Mark 5:25-34. The story begins with Jesus in a crowd, “pressed around” on all sides. One in the crowd trying to get close to Jesus was this woman, who “had been subject to bleeding for twelve years.” 

It’s important to note the context here. The Old Covenant Law stated that women with blood issues had to be “put apart” from the community for seven days. This woman had been bleeding for 12 years. Pause and let that register. A decade of bleeding would have debilitated, depressed, and weakened her. Worse, she was made to live apart from her community, friends, and family. Exhausted. Lonely. Desperate for connection and love. Desperate for a way out.

Mark gives us the details of this encounter: 

And a woman was there who had been subject to bleeding for twelve years. She had suffered a great deal under the care of many doctors and had spent all she had, yet instead of getting better she grew worse. When she heard about Jesus, she came up behind Him in the crowd and touched His cloak, because she thought, “If I just touch His clothes, I will be healed.” Immediately her bleeding stopped and she felt in her body that she was freed from her suffering.

At once Jesus realized that power had gone out from Him. He turned to the crowd and asked, “Who touched my clothes?” “You see the people crowding against you,” His disciples answered, “and yet you can ask, ‘Who touched me?’ But Jesus kept looking around to see who had done it. Then the woman, knowing what had happened to her, came and fell at His feet and, trembling with fear, told Him the whole truth. He said to her, “Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from your suffering.”

Notice how Jesus told her the Good News. He stopped everything, gave her His full attention, and addressed her as she truly was: not defective, not worthless, but as His beloved child. Jesus told her the truth in love. He carefully noted her desperation, and leaned into her vulnerability. I envision her sobbing tears of joy! Jesus fully healed her and fully accepted her — and now she could fully live.

Jesus didn’t tell people the Good News because He had to, but because He loved them. Though He could have stayed in Heaven, Jesus chose to become human, like us, so that we could see Him eye-to-eye, and clearly see and hear the truth.

Wow, I had it all upside down! Truth be told, in my early days of evangelizing, I spoke to everyone as if they were a Pharisee. But I realized that when I talk to people about the Good News, I must start with love — as Jesus did. 

And I must let that love guide how I speak to them. To show love, I have to want to understand others. I must step into their world and be relational with what they’re dealing with — as Jesus did. Yes, it’s harder for me because I don’t have God’s loving nature, but I could certainly do better! 


Let’s Follow Jesus’ Example

Jesus is for all of us, because He knows how desperately we need to be in relationship with Him. So let’s NOT get in the way and mess that up!

I invite you to reflect upon your own journey with Him. Reflect on how God reached out to you. It was with kindness and compassion, right? So how should that guide you in talking to people about the truth of Christ?

I hope you feel encouraged to imitate Christ in not only what He said, but how He said it. Let’s admire Him, and get excited about being like Him, so that others can come to personally know Him, too!


>>> God wants a relationship with you. Click here to learn more!


Dylan Kochan works in administration with Josh McDowell Ministry. He is an aspiring law/philosophy student, hoping to bring the Christian worldview to both fields. A resident of Southern California, Dylan is excited to marry his beautiful fianceé.
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Is It Okay to Be All In With Hobbies? https://www.josh.org/okay-be-all-in-with-hobbies/ https://www.josh.org/okay-be-all-in-with-hobbies/#respond Sat, 27 Aug 2022 01:16:58 +0000 https://www.josh.org/?p=71100

Do you have any hobbies that you really enjoy in your free time?

Perhaps you like to watch movies or play computer games, or you’re a big fan of sports or music. Personally, I enjoy collecting action figures, LEGO sets, and comic books. I also like to spend time watching online entertainment reviews. All positive, fun hobbies.

But my hobbies can become a problem when I give them too much of my time. Sometimes, when I allow my hobbies to consume me, I put really important things like my family and my Christian faith on the back burner. I can forget what’s really important in life.

Can you relate?

weakness

Inviting God Into Our Hobbies

In the New Testament book of Luke, Jesus is approached by a rich man who asks Him what he must do to gain eternal life. Jesus tells the rich man to sell everything and follow Him. But the rich man walks away, dejected. He is so attached to his riches, that he can’t bear to give them away.

He can’t see that Jesus is trying to show him where he should be placing his primary commitment: on the things of heaven. Wealth is certainly appealing, but it is temporary. We can’t take it with us, and it sure won’t buy us an eternity with Jesus.

Our attachment to things (and even people), can cause us to give God only a fragment of our heart. I really enjoy my collections, but this story reminds me that my action figures, LEGO, and comics are just “stuff.” They are unimportant, compared to having Jesus in my life.

That’s not to say that hobbies are “bad,” or that God doesn’t purposely give us our interest in them. He may already have a plan in mind to use them as opportunities for people to hear about Jesus. Actually, this has happened in my life. My mom asked to use some of my LEGO as part of a Vacation Bible School (Christian summer camp for kids) lesson on how Jesus builds us up. How cool is that?


Setting Habits to Keep God Central

When we become Christians, God calls us to continually deepen our knowledge and faith, and to glorify Him in whatever we think, say, or do. But our schedules can get jam-packed to where we can become so busy with work and hobbies that we forget to carve out time to focus on God.

When I recognize that I’ve spent more time on my hobbies than thinking about God, I feel convicted. Fortunately, God doesn’t hold this against me. He always warmly welcomes me back to spending time with Him.

One tool that has helped me is setting a daily habit to read my Bible and pray. Talking about the Bible with my friends also helps to deepen my commitment to live for Jesus, as does my family’s weekly Bible study on Monday nights.

And when I see the need, I intentionally limit the amount of time I allow my hobbies. When I was younger, my parents sometimes made me put my LEGO sets away when they saw that I was becoming too absorbed with them. This didn’t make me happy at the time, of course. But now I see that their boundary helped me to see my need for balance.

I really enjoy my hobbies, and I expect to keep enjoying them. But I am fully committed to only one thing: Jesus. He wants to know and guide you and me, and He does so when we choose to pursue Him first in our lives.

Do you know Jesus yet? He is so worth putting first in our lives! 


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GUEST BLOGGER CLAYTON THOMAS CARTER, A STUDENT IN PLANO, TEXAS, IS PASSIONATE ABOUT ENCOURAGING THE KNOWLEDGE OF A BIBLICAL WORLDVIEW. HE ENJOYS PLAYING TRUMPET AND SERVING AT HIS CHURCH.
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Overcoming Hurdles: I Know God is Real https://www.josh.org/hurdles-i-know-god-is-real/ https://www.josh.org/hurdles-i-know-god-is-real/#respond Tue, 26 Jul 2022 05:42:13 +0000 https://www.josh.org/?p=65489

Friends! We’ve reached the final post in this blog series based on Josh’s best-selling apologetics classic: More Than a Carpenter! Our goal in these 17 posts has been to definitively answer “Who is Jesus?” This week we’re sharing with you how Josh made the leap from diehard skeptic to sold-out believer. 

In Josh’s case, the journey took time. The historical evidence he’d studied for months in libraries across Europe had convinced Josh of the facts supporting the truth of Jesus being the Son of God. Yet Josh still “felt a strong reluctance to make the plunge” of asking Jesus to be his Savior.

Read on to learn the personal hurdles Josh had to get past to fully believe in God’s love and power. Perhaps Josh’s struggle is the struggle YOU are experiencing in your own heart and mind today.

More Than a Carpenter blog #whoisjesus

Josh’s Hurdles to Trusting

“I had to admit,” says Josh, “that Jesus Christ must be exactly who He claimed to be. I could plainly see that Christianity was not a myth, not a fantasy of wishful dreamers, not a hoax played on the simple-minded, but rock-solid truth. My mind was telling me that Christianity was true, but my will was resisting it with all the energy it could muster.”

Yet two hurdles held Josh back: The first was pleasure. Becoming a Christian meant having no more fun … right? “I did not want any party pooper spoiling my fun,” Josh admits. “I couldn’t think of any faster way to ruin my good times.” Typical thinking for a college kid. But many people have the mistaken idea that choosing Jesus will remove — rather than add — joy to their life. That life becomes one big “Do Not!”

The second obstacle was Josh’ pride. If Josh chose a relationship with Jesus, he’d have to admit that the Christians on campus who had dared him to disprove God were, well, right. Having egg on his face galled Josh. “Every time I got around those enthusiastic Christians,” he admits, “the inner conflict would boil over.” Letting go of ego can feel incredibly painful. Especially when you pride yourself on your intellectualism, as Josh did.

Josh had believed that Christianity was fake — and Christians dimwits for believing in it — and now he was faced with deciding whether to become one of them. Another hurdle!

“I had always tried to be open-minded, but not so open-minded that my brains would fall out,” quips Josh. Yet in his research of Christ, Josh had to admit that he’d found “the most solid reality” he had yet to experience. So on December 19, 1959, at 8:30 p.m., Josh finally invited Jesus to become his friend and Savior.


Indisputable Personal Proof

His prayer wasn’t a “bolt of lightning” moment, admits Josh. “After I prayed, nothing happened. I mean nothing. And I still haven’t sprouted wings and a halo.” But Josh did slowly begin to notice changes within himself. One of the biggest changes was relief from his constant restlessness. Before he accepted Christ, Josh says that he always had to be occupied; that he was always bouncing off the walls. But he began to feel a mental peace that helped to settle him.

And he felt better able to handle stress and conflict. Josh had previously “walked around ticked off with people, things, and issues,” his insecurities causing him to view most people as threats. “I used to blow my stack if anyone just looked at me cross-eyed,” Josh admits. “My temper was such a part of me that I didn’t consciously seek to change it. But one day I encountered a crisis that should have set me off, only to find that I stayed calm and collected.” His no longer felt goaded to angrily lash out. 

Another amazing change was God’s removal of Josh’s deep-seated hatred toward his father, the town drunk. “My high school friends had made jokes about my dad’s drinking,” shares Josh. “They didn’t think it bothered me because I fell in with the joking and laughed with them. I was laughing on the outside, but let me tell you, I was crying on the inside.”


“About five months after I made that decision for Christ, a love from God entered my life so powerfully that it took that hatred, turned it upside down, and emptied it out. I was able to look my father squarely in the eyes and say, ‘Dad, I love you.’ And I really meant it.”

One day Josh’s father looked at Josh, totally blowing Josh’s mind as he said, “Son, if God can do in my life what I’ve seen Him do in yours, then I want to give Him the opportunity. I want to trust Him as my Savior and Lord.” Unlike Josh’s steady metamorphosis, his dad was instantly changed. “It’s as if God reached down and flipped on the light switch,” says Josh. “Never before or since have I seen such a dramatic change.” His supernatural 180 influenced many in his small town to give their lives to Jesus, too.

The second person that Josh was able to forgive was Wayne, the hired help who had sexually molested Josh for 6+ years. The unwanted abuse started when Josh was just six years old. “I wanted Wayne to burn in hell and I was willing to escort him there,” admits Josh. “The memories of the abuse scarred me.” But after accepting Christ, Josh was able to release his hatred.

“It was one of the most difficult things I’ve ever had to do. I could never have done it on my own, he says. “If you have a similar story, be assured that you don’t have to face your demons alone, either. Your past can be overcome with God’s help.”

People can mock and ridicule Christianity — as Josh himself once did — but it’s powerful and it’s real. Christianity isn’t a religion. It’s not an ethical idea. And it’s not a psychological phenomenon. It’s a person, Jesus Christ.

Don’t let trusting in God’s love and goodness be a hurdle for you. Jesus wants to change your heart, heal your wounds, and renew your life. You just need to grant Him access.

Jesus is continually trying to get your attention and draw you to Himself. Your present isn’t a hurdle to Him. Your past isn’t a hurdle to Him. There is nothing you can do to remove His love and grace for you. This may sound impossible to you, but it’s one aspect of Christianity that you initially have to take on faith. Then, as you daily grow in your relationships with Jesus, He will continually prove it!

“Perhaps the prayer I prayed will help you,” adds Josh. “Lord Jesus, I need you. Thank you for dying on the cross for me. Forgive me and cleanse me. At this very moment I trust you as Savior and Lord. Make me the type of person you created me to be. In Christ’s name. Amen.”

In this series we’ve focused on showing you that the claims of Christ stand firm as solid historical facts, confirmed by the evidence of history, prophecy, and reason. Understanding the facts will give you a solid, dependable foundation to stand on as you experience Christ for yourself!


Jesus: He’s More Than a Carpenter!

FREE download: Read the first chapter of Josh’s bestseller, More Than a Carpenter. You can buy the book here.

> Watch how More Than a Carpenter changed one reader’s life AND set off a chain reaction that introduced many others to Jesus. That’s how the truth of God’s love is shared: person to person!

> Want to learn more about starting YOUR personal relationship with Jesus? Click here.

     

You can buy the book in English or Spanish.

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Why is Jesus the Only Way? https://www.josh.org/jesus-the-only-way/ https://www.josh.org/jesus-the-only-way/#respond Tue, 12 Jul 2022 05:56:59 +0000 https://www.josh.org/?p=65487

Jesus is our focus in this blog series based on Josh’s best-selling apologetics classic: More Than a Carpenter. Why does learning about who Jesus is matter? Because this exploratory journey helps us to definitively answer “Who am I? … “Why am I here?” and “What’s the point of life?” 

Why is Jesus the only way to understand ourselves and the meaning of life? Read on!

Jesus: The Only Way?

In our world of seemingly unlimited choice and personal preference, it can be really hard to believe there is ONE way to the truth. “Why is Jesus the only way?” many ask, when Buddha and numerous other options seem just as plausible. “I don’t need a Savior,” they’re quick to add. “I’m a good person.”

Perhaps … but don’t people think they get to define “good” for themselves? Society actively encourages us to find our own “truth,” right? Even as it pushes aside an “s” word that really can’t be swept under the rug: our SIN, and its consequences.

Let’s look a bit at the elephant in the room. “How,” ask some, “can a supposedly loving God send me or anyone else to hell? Isn’t that the exact opposite of loving?”

Josh McDowell’s reply is this: “How can a holy, just, and righteous God allow a sinful person in His presence? He is not only a God of love but also a God who is righteous, just and holy. He can’t tolerate sin in His heaven any more than you could tolerate a filthy, foul-smelling, diseased dog living in your home. This misunderstanding about the basic nature of God is the cause of many theological and ethical problems.”

So, Jesus came and died for you, me, and everyone else, giving us unfiltered access to a personal relationship with God. That’s why Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the LIFE.” Part of our relationship with God includes living with Him in eternity.

So the truth, no matter how we slice and dice it: God doesn’t send anyone to hell; people choose it for themselves when they reject Jesus as Savior. “But,” many assert, “that’s not fair!”


What parent hasn’t heard their child utter the same words? But fair to whom? The willful child, whose perception is limited and entirely self-focused? Or the parent, who sees the bigger picture and knows what is good for the child?


Look, we’re all born self-absorbed and selfish. “Well,” suggest some, “that’s God’s fault, if He created us.”

Actually, we can’t lay any blame on God. Because God has graciously given us FREE WILL to make our own choices. So, ultimately, the choices we make are on us, not Him.

Jesus: The Ultimate Sacrifice

God wants us so much, though, that He came to us in human form — through Jesus — to redeem us. In His choosing to be sacrificed on the cross, Jesus met God’s holy and just requirements so that we don’t have to. In removing our “contamination” (circling back to the “filthy, foul-smelling, diseased dog” metaphor), we can stand “clean” in God’s presence.

If you’re not yet grasping just how HUGE a deal this is, keep pondering it. Allow the magnitude of Jesus’ selfless act to settle deep into your mind and heart. Jesus wasn’t just a “great teacher” or “healer.” He sacrificed Himself on YOUR behalf.

“But if Jesus really was God,” you might be thinking, “He didn’t really die. That would have been impossible. So His ‘sacrifice’ isn’t as monumental as you’re trying to make it out to be.”

Ah. Yes, I can see the logic in how you got there. But remember that Jesus was also fully human. So He felt every sting of the whips as they ripped apart his skin and muscles. And He felt the pain of every jagged breath as He labored for hours on the cross. Jesus symbolically died for you. But He also literally died for you — to prove the depth of God’s love. (Who do you love so much that YOU would endure this torture?)


A man stood before the judge, awaiting the judge’s verdict. “I find you guilty as charged,” announced the judge, “and order you to pay a fine of $1000 or ten days in jail.” Then he did an amazing thing. He stood up, took off his robe, stepped down from the bench, and paid the man’s fine. Why? The judge was the man’s father. He loved his son, yet he was a just judge. Because he loved his son, he couldn’t let his son off, but he willingly paid his fine. This story illustrates what God has done for us through Jesus.


Like this judge, when God looks at us, in spite of His tremendous love for us, He has to bring the gavel down and say death because He is a righteous God. And yet, because He also is a loving God, He came down from His heavenly throne and put on human skin, to pay the price for our redemption.

It’s at this point that you might ask, “Well, why can’t God just forgive me without requiring any payment?”

The answer is that where there is forgiveness, there is payment. If you total someone’s car, and they forgive you, there is still the cost of replacing the vehicle. If someone insults you in front of others, and later you graciously say, “I forgive you,” who has shouldered the price of the insult witnessed by others? You have.

This is what God has done for us: He has said, “I forgive you.” But then paid the price for His forgiveness. It’s not a payment that Buddha, Muhammad, Confucius, nor any other religious or ethical leader can ever offer. And you can’t pay the price by being a “good person.” The ONLY way is through Jesus. Will you accept His love and grace today?


Jesus: He’s More Than a Carpenter!

FREE download: Read the first chapter of Josh’s bestseller, More Than a Carpenter. You can buy the book here.

> Watch how More Than a Carpenter changed one reader’s life AND set off a chain reaction that introduced many others to Jesus. That’s how the truth of God’s love is shared: person to person!

> Want to learn more about starting YOUR personal relationship with Jesus? Click here.

     

You can buy the book in English or Spanish.

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Jesus Fit Himself Into Prophecy? https://www.josh.org/jesus-fit-into-prophecy/ https://www.josh.org/jesus-fit-into-prophecy/#respond Tue, 28 Jun 2022 05:38:47 +0000 https://www.josh.org/?p=65484

Jesus! He’s our focus in this blog series based on Josh’s best-selling apologetics classic: More Than a Carpenter. In this post let’s look at whether prophecy helps us to identify the identity of the Savior.

Is Jesus really who He claimed to be — the Son of God and the Jews’ long-awaited Messiah? 

Of all the men ever born, Jesus is the only one to fulfill all Old Testament prophecy about the coming Messiah’s birth, death, and resurrection. Let’s look more at that astounding fact!

More Than a Carpenter blog #whoisjesus

Prophecy Reveals the Messiah

Jesus repeatedly pointed to Old Testament prophecy to substantiate His claims about Himself. What events had to precede and coincide with Jesus’ arrival? Let’s look at just a handful.

Let’s start with Genesis 3:15: “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed and her Seed; He shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise His heel.” Only Jesus could possibly fulfill this prophecy. Because He’s the only person in history who did not come from the seed of a man. Jesus, as the “seed” of a woman (Christ’s virgin birth), came to us to destroy the works of Satan (bruise his head) and redeem us unto Himself. Hallelujah!

Genesis 9 and 10 helps us to see what prophecy had to say about Jesus’ bloodline. Let’s go all the way back to Noah, who courageously built the ark when God told him about the upcoming flood. Noah had three sons: Shem, Ham, and Japheth. All nations of the world can be traced back to these three men. Through prophecy, God let it be known that the Messiah would come through the lineage of Shem.

Then God got even more specific. He told Abraham that the Messiah would be one of his descendants. Abraham had two sons, Isaac and Ishmael. Isaac had two sons, Jacob and Esau. God chose the lineage of Jacob. His 12 sons fathered the 12 tribes of Israel. God then singled out the tribe of Judah, choosing the lineage of Jesse, who had eight sons, one of whom was David. Interesting note: David, regarded as Israel’s greatest king, is the most frequently mentioned person in the Old Testament. Only Jesus is mentioned more frequently than David in the entire Bible.

So, in terms of lineage, prophecy stated that the Messiah must be born of the seed of a woman, the line of Shem, the race of the Jews, the line of Isaac, the line of Jacob, the tribe of Judah, the family of Jesse, and the house of David. Then God eliminated all but one city in the world, Bethlehem (Micah 5:2), as the location of Jesus’ birth. God even defined the time of Jesus’ arrival: during a period in which the Jewish Temple is still standing. This is of great significance when we realize that the Temple was destroyed in AD 70 and has not since been rebuilt.

A prophecy dating from 1012 BC predicts that the Messiah’s hands and feet would be pierced and that He would be crucified (Psalm 22:6-18, Zechariah 12:10, Galatians 3:13). Don’t miss this fact: The description of Jesus’ death was written 800 years before the Romans used crucifixion as a method of execution. Other Scriptures provide prophetic details on the place, time, and manner of Jesus’ birth, people’s reactions, and His betrayal.


The Old Testament, written over a period of a 1000 years, contains more than 300 references to Christ, recorded hundreds of years before His birth. 


The authors of the book Science Speaks ran calculations to analyze the probability of a single person being able to fulfill all Old Testament Messianic prophecy. By analyzing just eight prophecies, they found that the chance of any man fulfilling all eight is 1 in 10 to the 17th power. That’s one in 100,000,000,000,000,000. Mind blown! In fulfilling these eight prophecies alone, Jesus gives us proof that God inspired the Old Testament writings.

Some skeptics assert that Jesus was able to fulfill all prophecy by simply taking careful, deliberate action. In other words, Jesus checked off a list, much like you and I might check off our to-do list. Interesting idea — but we’d have to admit that many of the details of Jesus’ birth and death were entirely beyond human control.

Jesus could not have controlled the details of His birth, nor manipulated the details of His betrayal or crucifixion. Jesus was able to fulfill all Old Testament prophecies ONLY because He’s the Son of God.

God gave us so much prophetic information so that we can clearly see that Jesus is the Messiah. That’s how much God wants us to know Jesus. Will you trust in Him today? He’s trustworthy!


Jesus: He’s More Than a Carpenter!

FREE download: Read the first chapter of Josh’s bestseller, More Than a Carpenter. You can buy the book here.

> Watch how More Than a Carpenter changed one reader’s life AND set off a chain reaction that introduced many others to Jesus. That’s how the truth of God’s love is shared: person to person!

> Want to learn more about starting YOUR personal relationship with Jesus? Click here.

     

You can buy the book in English or Spanish.

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