Blog Update

This week we will be a launching a more regular scheduled posting. This is in connection with the "weekly impact cards" for our ministry team and participants. Each week a post will be published to encourage, challenge and point people to Jesus. They will be written by our sports team and volunteer staff. I trust they are an encouragement to you as well.

Thanks for your support of Sports Impact.

tim

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Gospel of John

“Yet to all who received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God.”

John 1:12

Last week we read an excerpt from C.S. Lewis’s Mere Christianity. I challenged you to reflect on who you truly believe Jesus to be. I believe there is no other question more important that who we believe Jesus actually is.

In preparation to our final regular season message to men playing in our Open Basketball League, I listened to Fact or Fiction, a sermon series that Joe Coffey preached a few years back. One of my favorite parts of the series is the introduction when Joe confronts the common thought that in order to believe in Christianity, “you have to take your brain and put it on a shelf and just trust in your heart, with blind faith, against all odds, against all evidence, like a child that believes in Santa Clause or the Tooth Fairy.”

Joe responds to this by saying he believes nothing is farther from the truth. The Fact or Fiction series gives evidence, facts, and explanations to questions many of us have asked before. (If you are interested in a copy, email matt.simmonds@hudsonchapel.org)

In the verse above it talks about those that believe in “his name.” His name is actually referring to everything that is true about Jesus or essentially the totality of his person. As we look at the life of Christ through the Gospel of John, we want to you challenge your heart and mind. The story of Jesus’ life is loving, sacrificial, unique, bold, and sometimes confusing. We want you to wrestle with the stories and to decide for yourself what kind of impact it will have on your life.

Today my challenge is to start asking questions again. Maybe you became a Christian years ago but when asked why you believe in what you believe it’s hard to give an answer. Maybe you have given up on answering the questions that you were once so curious to find out. Or maybe you haven’t decided whether Jesus is who he said he was. Wherever you’re at, I encourage you to start investigating. I admit, I have left many questions unanswered myself and it’s time I started asking those questions again.

- Matt Simmonds