Giving Thanks in All Things

November 26, 2024

“In everything give thanks; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.” (1 Thessalonians 5:18 NASB95)

Are you able to give thanks in everything?  I’m sure this is something we can all grow in.  We need to learn to be thankful in all circumstances—whether life is good or life is hard, because this is God’s will for us.  The truth is, no matter what is going on in our lives there are always many reasons to be thankful.

I suppose it is easier to give thanks when times are good, but we need to be intentional about it.  When life is rolling along gently and easily, we can tend to take our blessings for granted.  We somehow still find reasons to complain.  We sometimes lose perspective on how easy our lives are compared to what so many others face in this world.  And sometimes, when God brings a tremendous blessing into our lives or graciously answers our prayers, we forget to thank Him.  We can so easily become like the nine leppers who forgot (or didn’t care to) thank Jesus for healing them.

What about when life is hard?  Are there still reasons to give thanks to God?  When we face difficulties, we tend to focus on our problems and forget that there are still blessings abounding in our lives.  We forget that there are still many things going right.  There are even reasons to be thankful for the trials themselves because God has promised, if we will keep looking to Him in trusting faith, that the trials will turn out for our benefit.  The trials of life purify and refine us.  They help us to grow in perseverance, character, and hope.  And so, even when things are very hard, we can give thanks to God. 

And it’s important to remember that no matter what happens, we can always give thanks to God for our salvation in Jesus Christ.  We can always give thanks for our eternal home reserved for us in heaven.  We can always give thanks that we can call God our Father and that He loves us as His children.  We can always give thanks that our sins are forgiven.  We can always give thanks that the Father and His Son dwell in our hearts through the Spirit who was given to us. 

Let’s give thanks in everything.  This is God’s will for us.

—Scott Colvin


Time for Repentance

November 19, 2024

Repentance is an extremely important concept all throughout the scriptures.  To repent is to turn away from sin.  There can be no salvation without it.  Repentance leads to life (Acts 11:18).  Our God is rich in kindness, and His kindness leads us to repentance (Romans 2:4).  God does not wish for anyone to perish, but for all to come to repentance (2 Peter 3:9).  Because God is rich in mercy and kindness, He gives all people, everywhere, time to repent.

But that time is not unlimited.  God has proven again and again that He is very longsuffering, but He has also proven again and again that eventually He will bring judgment on the unrepentant, even among His own people.  God punished His own people many times in the Old Testament because of their hardened, unrepentant hearts.  God punished people within the church in New Testament times as well.  The self-proclaimed prophetess in the church at Thyatira, Jezebel, comes to mind.  Jezebel was teaching and leading the servants of Christ into immorality and idolatry, and therefore Jesus says of her, “I gave her time to repent, and she does not want to repent of her immorality.  Behold, I will throw her on a bed of sickness, and those who commit adultery with her into great tribulation, unless they repent of her deeds.” (Revelation 2:21-22 NASB95) Jesus gave her time! But time was up.  She made it clear that she did not want to repent, and so the judgment of Christ was coming.  Judgment was also imminent for those who joined her in sin, but Jesus, in His great patience and mercy, gave them a little more time for repentance.

You and I need to take the lesson to heart.  Let us never think lightly of God’s kindness, patience, and tolerance.  Let us not test God, nor harden our hearts and stiffen our necks toward His word.  Rather, let us be thankful for His mercy, listen to His word, and turn away from sin.  God desires for all people to come to repentance.  Thanks be to God for providing the way to complete forgiveness and abundant life through His beloved Son.  Let us not delay in coming to Him!

—Scott Colvin


Aspiring to be an Elder

November 12, 2024

This article is a call for our younger men to begin preparing themselves to serve as elders in the church.  Elders (also referred to as shepherds, pastors, bishops, or overseers) have a very critical role to play in the life and health of the church.  And since becoming an elder takes years of spiritual preparation, the church should always be looking ahead and thinking about how to prepare faithful men for this role.

We can read about the qualifications of elders in 1 Timothy 3 and Titus 1.  Let’s take a look at some of the qualifications and consider how a man might prepare himself to fulfill them.  First, it is important to note that aspiring to be an elder is a good thing.  Paul wrote, “It is a trustworthy statement: if any man aspires to the office of overseer, it is a fine work he desires to do.” (1 Timothy 3:1 NASB95) The work of an overseer is often difficult and comes with very weighty responsibilities.  In light of this, it is important that there is a desire to take on this work.  Elders need to serve willingly and eagerly, not under compulsion. (1 Peter 5:2)

Second, an elder must be able to teach (1 Timothy 3:2). He must hold fast to the faithful word and be able to encourage sound teaching and refute false teaching (Titus 1:9).  An elder, then, must be a man who is deeply rooted in the truth.  An aspiring elder must prepare himself through serious, ongoing study of the word of God.  People’s souls will depend on you faithfully holding fast to the teaching.

An elder must be one who “manages his own household well, keeping his children under control with all dignity (but if a man does not know how to manage his own household, how will he take care of the church of God?) (1 Timothy 3:4-5 NASB95) The training ground for an elder is the family.  The one who aspires to be an elder must aspire to lead his family in the ways of God.

Finally, an elder must be a man who is himself walking with God.  Looking through the lists of qualities in 1 Timothy and Titus we see many descriptors of the kind of man he should be:  temperate, prudent, respectable, hospitable, gentle, peaceable, a lover of what is good, free from the love of money, not self-willed, not quick-tempered, not addicted to wine, not a bully (pugnacious).  In short, he must be a man who is being led by the Spirit of God.  He should be a man who has been walking with the Lord for many years; a man whose character has been transformed by the Lord.

It is a good thing for our men to aspire to this work.  If you feel the desire to serve as an elder one day, I encourage you to begin preparing now.  And if you do not desire this work, I still encourage you to strive for these qualities, for they are wonderful qualities for each of us to pursue.  May God raise up godly men among us to serve our congregation in this way.      

—Scott Colvin


Seeking God

November 12, 2024

In his sermon in Acts chapter 17, Paul reveals some magnificent things about the true God of heaven to a group of Athenian philosophers who did not know God.  Paul tells them that God made the world and all things in it.  He tells them that God does not need to be served by humans as if He needed anything.  No, God is the one who serves mankind by giving us everything we need—life and breath and all things.  He tells them that it is God who made all mankind and determined where they would live.

But why has God been so kind and generous to all people in these ways?  This brings Paul to his central point.  He said it was so “that they would seek God, if perhaps they might grope for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us…” (Acts 17:27 NASB95) God has poured out His blessings on all so that we would seek Him!  What a profound truth it is that God wants all to search for Him, and He wants all to find Him!

And what a profound truth it is that God does require that we search, that we grope for Him, feeling our way toward Him to discover who He is.  God does not reveal the wonders of Himself to just anyone.  He only reveals Himself to those who will seek Him.  God has been very clear about this throughout scripture.  Take this verse, for example: “How blessed are those who observe His testimonies, Who seek Him with all their heart.” (Psalm 119:2 NASB95) Or take the words of Jesus as another example: “Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.” (Matthew 7:7 NASB95) Or consider this verse, where Paul explains that in Jesus “… are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.” (Colossians 2:3 NASB95) You see, the treasures of God’s wisdom and knowledge are not available to just anyone.  They are hidden in Christ.  God desires that we do some digging before He will allow access to these blessings. 

But the beautiful thing is that God will allow us to find Him.  He wants to be found.  He wants a relationship with you and me.  The question for us is, are we still searching for Him?  Even if we have already found Him, there is still more to be found.  We must continue to dig deeper to explore even more of the beauty and the delight that is found in God and in His beloved Son.  May God lead us ever deeper into Himself!    

—Scott Colvin