Archive for the ‘Wesley United Methodist Church’ Category
Upperroom Daily Devotional
August 22, 2017Lectionary Scriptures for 8-27-17
August 21, 2017- Exodus 1:8-2:10 and Psalm 124 •
- Isaiah 51:1-6 and Psalm 138 •
- Romans 12:1-8 •
- Matthew 16:13-20
Upperroom Daily Devotional
August 21, 2017Upperroom Daily Devotional
August 20, 2017Upperroom Daily Devotional
August 19, 2017Jews are Stingy??????
August 18, 2017Attached is a link to a website called “First Fruits of Zion.” I have also posted the article below. This website is produced by a Messianic Jewish group and in my opinion tries to help all of us Christians understand our Jewish roots, who Jesus was and why we believe what we believe. It can dispel so much of the hatred towards Jews in the world today by those of us who are Christian who may read this article. If we who are Christian can not contribute to this hateful prejudice the world can be a better place. I would recommend this link to anyone who is interested in growing spiritually.
Ironically, anti-Semites depict Jewish people as greedy, stingy money-lovers. The opposite is true. Charity is a central pillar of Jewish identity and the Torah-life. It reflects God’s own nature as an act of grace. When it comes to giving generously, Jewish people excel because Jewish culture has internalized the Torah’s principles of giving.
The Gospels and the Epistles constantly encourage us to give to those in need and to give generously. The Master quotes Deuteronomy 17:11 saying, “You always have the poor with you” (John 12:8), and He expects us to give generously to them. A majority of the Master’s directives have to do with the subject of giving charity. He assumes that we will give charity, saying, “When you give to the poor” (Matthew 6:2), not, “If you give to the poor.” He points out that even the hypocrites give charity.
Our Father in Heaven asks us to “freely open our hand to our brother, to the needy and the poor” (Deuteronomy 15:11). The Talmud states it this way: “Everybody is obliged to give charity; even one who himself depends upon charity should give to those less fortunate than himself.” You can always find someone less fortunate.
In Jewish terminology, charity and righteousness are almost synonymous. The Hebrew word tzedakah (צדקה) literally means “righteousness,” but people use it idiomatically as a synonym for charity and alms.
When we give charity, we should do so without fanfare or accolades. Yeshua tells us that when we give, we are not to announce it with trumpets, which is to say, we are not to make a show out of it. He says our giving should be in secret. Reb Yannai once saw somebody giving a zuz to a poor man in the market place. He said, “It were better not to have given him anything rather than to have given him and shamed him.” According to Talmud, “It is permitted to deceive a poor man who out of pride refuses to accept charity, and to allow him to think that it is a loan you are giving him.” Our giving should be in secret, but of course, it is better to give in whatever manner we can than not to give at all.
Maimonides listed eight ascending levels of charity.
- One who gives sadly and reluctantly.
- One who gives less than is fitting, but in good humor.
- One who gives only after being asked to give.
- One who gives before being asked.
- One who gives in such a way that he does not know who is receiving it.
- One who gives in such a manner that the recipient does not know who the donor is.
- One who gives in total anonymity, so that he does not know who will receive it and the receiver does not know who gave it.
- One who helps the poor to rehabilitate themselves by lending them money, taking them into partnerships, employing them, or giving them work, for in this way the end is achieved without any loss of self-respect at all.
The sages say, “The poor man does more for the giver than the giver does for the poor man.” Why? Because the poor man gives the giver the opportunity to perform a mitzvah. When we come across those in need, our hearts should leap with joy because they provide us with the opportunity to do a mitzvah. Suddenly we have the opportunity to return to God some of the wealth he has bestowed upon us.
How much should we give? The true disciple asks “How much more can I give? How can I find a way to give more?”
Upperroom Daily Devotional
August 18, 2017Upperroom Daily Devotional
August 17, 2017Lectionary Scriptures for 8-20-17
August 17, 2017Hate Groups Do Not Know Jesus Christ
August 16, 2017Below you will see my response to a post on Dobianchi.com (https://dobianchi.com/2017/08/14/charlottesville-donald-trump/) about the riots and the slurs and threats made against Jews and other minority groups in our America. Dobianchi is my son in law. He is the father of my two granddaughters and is deeply saddened when he thinks about his children (I am as well) having to face such prejudiced hatred toward them. I pray for God to bless them daily by keeping them safe and for them to feel the love that is poured out on them by a Judeo Christian family.
Jeremy, thanks for this posting. What saddens me most is the hate message that the KKK and other White Supremacist organizations espouse. Especially when they claim to be Christian. Denouncing those organizations is just not enough. There needs to be coming from the Christian community a very loud and firm voice saying that anyone who participates in or condones these groups cannot not be a follower of Jesus Christ. Christianity given to us by the New Testament, the Gospel Message, the letters of Paul and others leave no room for hatred or condemnation of Jews much less any other race or religion. Jesus’ message in Matthew 22:36-40 is about how we put God and neighbor first in our lives. There is nowhere to be found a message that says we are to be filled with so much hate for a group of people that we should resort to violence to impose our will on them or destroy them. As a Pastor, I am bewildered by the assumption that because it was Jewish leadership that had Jesus crucified we should hate Jews. Jesus was a Jewish Rabbi. He was faithful to the law that He came to help us understand. His ministry was to help us see the compassion and service the law held people to and to help us see that man had made parts of the law unbearable. His love and compassion for humanity set us free to love and worship God as well as emphasized the need to be compassionate servants for and to our neighbors. Hug and kiss those semi-semite grandaughters of ours. As long as they know they are loved by God and by family they will be able to withstand those who follow hateful ideologies. Your Mother in law and Father in law love you.

