Monday, June 24, 2013

Making Up for Lost Time - What Zaccheus and Ebenezer Scrooge had in Common

Have you ever felt the need to make up for lost time?  You wish you had done things differently and now you try to make up for you did not do as you wish you had.  YOU ARE NOT ALONE.  Millions share your feeling.

This message was presented at a Friday Evening Meeting of the Celebrate Recovery at the New Salem Baptist Church.  Bonnie Crawford was the lead minister for the ministry.  This Friday Night was one she called on me to share.  I am Oscar Crawford.  This message is Making Up for Lost Time, What Zaccheus and Ebenezer Scrooge had in Common.  All who you may feel free to use this in places and in settings you believe it would be a blessing.

Making Up For Lost Time

And Zaccheus stood, and said unto the Lord; “BEHOLD, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor; and if I have taken anything from any man by false accusation, I restore to him fourfold.”
And Jesus said unto him, “This day is salvation come to your house, forasmuch as he (Zaccheus) is also a son of Abraham. For the Son of Man is come to seek and save that which is lost.”
Luke 19 vss 8 – 10
Holy Spirit, indwell this moment and all of us fully that the word may come forth so clear, the ear of our hearts will hear.  Save, restore, and encourage your created living souls, us.  Release more power for the ministry of building God’s (kingdom domain) on the earth, one soul or seven billion souls at a time.  Such is your unlimited capacity to supersede the natural with your supernatural nature.   
Reveal yourself in such a way that we cannot believe what we see with our eyes, hear with our ears, and feel with our hearts.  Where you do your thing, where your spirit passes through; lives change, physical and financial conditions change, relationships change, conflicts become peace, powerlessness becomes power, the haughty become humble, and the humble are lifted up to lead and serve.  Thank you for all that you have already done and all that you are going to do in the omnipotent name of Jesus.  Amen.

I thank God for the privilege of my life and ministry.  It is one incredible moment after another.  It has brought us (You and I)   together for the shared NOW of such a time as this.  This is the hour of somebody’s or a group of somebody’s deliverance. 
If you believe God can do all things his word says he can do, you ought to shout with a shout of triumph and shout with the shout of a victor.  Praise him like a conqueror.  Glorify him like a champion.  Our God is an awesome God.  Are you listening?
I hope you will be attentive for these moments we will share together.  They are moments of destiny, defining moments that lead us from where we are to where God is purposing us.  
Say to yourself and those closest to you, “Let’s be attentive”.
I want to begin our time together raising a few questions that each of us must answer as honestly as we can.
1.      Have you ever felt like you were just spinning your wheels, not really getting anywhere?
2.      Have you ever been invested in a relationship you have concluded was going nowhere and you felt like you could not get out?
3.      Have you ever been hooked on an activity that was not good for you that you could not shake?
4.      Have you ever looked back over your life and felt like you have wasted your life?  Please be honest with yourself and with God.
If you have answered yes to any of the questions, I believe there is a word from the Lord that will encourage.
Like many of you, Christmas (the time honored among many Christians as the time of Jesus birth) is my favorite time of the year.  There is just something about Christmas that seems to bring out the better nature in most people, if even for a short period of time.  People seem a bit more kind, a bit more courteous and a bit more polite the closer we draw to December 25th.
People with special needs, who are doing without things that are necessary for life, i.e., the poor, the homeless, the imprisoned, the ill; all receive more help during Christmas than at any other time of the year.  Celebrities volunteer to help serve meals and distribute clothes in homeless shelters. 
Churches and other groups assist struggling families in need during the Christmas Season so much, it logically follows that we are compelled to raise the question, why can’t our spiritually based culture maintain this spirit and generous nature all the year?  Why can’t we?
One of the things I personally enjoy each Christmas Season is seeing how many different versions of Charles Dicken’s, A Christmas Carol, I can see.  I saw ten different ones this year.  There were the cartoon versions that included Mickey’s Christmas Carol, the Muppets’ Christmas Carol, the Flintstones Christmas Carol; the original black and white MGM studio versions; other old black and white classics; the colorized versions of the black and white classics; Bill Murray’s Scrooged; a version with Cicely Tyson; and the latest, A Diva’s Christmas Carol with Vanessa Williams.  I cherish these films and in the words of Tiny Tim, God Bless Them Everyone.
The central figure of a Christmas Carol is Ebenezer Scrooge.  He is a mean spirited old so and so of a man concerned only about using people and making profit.  We learn how cruel he is early on in the story but do not learn how he became this way until later on.
We learn that Scrooge is not that different from many of us.  He is a human being living with more than his share of pain.  Can we stop her for a moment?  How many people do you know living in emotional pain, right now?
We learn that Scrooge’s mother died giving him birth.  His father hated him for it.  He was sent away early in his life to a boarding school.  He was there for for years and not allowed to come home until his late teens at the request of his sister he called Little Fan.
Scrooge loves his sister.  She inspires love in him.  His sister dies giving birth to a son.  He now hates his nephew, Fred or killing his only love Little Fan as his father hated him for killing his mother. 
He has seen this behavioral response to pain modeled only too well by his own father.  Scrooge is mad at God but takes his wrath out on people. 
Time Out:  How many people do you know that are mad with God over something lost; a fortune, a loved one, or a job?  Have you ever been angry with God because you lost something and blamed God for your loss?
Scrooge falls in love with and becomes engaged to a beautiful young woman named Belle.  When Scrooge falls in love with money and the pursuit of money, he lets Belle go. He does not care who he hurts because money gives him the power to cause legal profitable pain.  He does not care who he hurts, it is just business. 
At the opening of the film, volunteers seeking donations on Christmas Eve to help London’s poor and needy seek a donation from Ebenezer Scrooge.  His response is rude.  He summarily dismisses them.
His nephew Fred drops by to wish him a Merry Christmas and invited him to Christmas Dinner with his wife, himself and friends.  Scrooge responds with the word humbug which means non sense.  Fred wishes him a Merry Christmas again on his way out.
When his office closed on Christmas Eve, he stopped at a local establishment for a meager dinner and made his way home.  Upon arrival at his door, his doorknocker turned into the face of Marley.
Scrooge is shaken but too mean to take it seriously.  During the night, Marley’s ghost shows up to warn of a lifetime wasted on chasing money.  Scrooge is yet mean and argues with the ghost he thinks may be a hallucination as a result of something he has eaten.
When he grows convinced of Marley’s real presence, he listens.  He learns he will be visited by three other ghosts during the night. 
The first is the ghost of Christmas past.  This ghost shows Scrooge his miserable childhood that is the source origin of his unresolved pain.  You are aware unresolved pain in your life can make you act crazy, treat yourself and other people really bad.  This was the lot of Ebenezer Scrooge. 

The second is the ghost of Christmas present.  This ghost shows Scrooge the happiness among the people and families that he knows.   Most make fun of him and despise him.  His servant Bob Cratchit cares for him and prays for him.  His nephew raises his glass to his ruthless uncle.  None can see Scrooge present.
The third is the ghost of Christmas yet to come.   This ghost shows him his death and all the people who are happy he is dead.  He is escorted to the cemetery and shown his own tombstone. 
No, this is not a pizza commercial.  This is Scrooge’s end.  Scrooge breaks and begins to beg for an opportunity to do better.  He promises that if he can escape this path, he will keep Christmas in his heart everyday.  He is holding on to death’s robes as he begs for another chance, when he finds himself holding on the curtains of his bed.
He feels himself to see if he is real and alive.  He gets up and starts to dance in ways you often see people dance in spirit filled churches. 
He yells out the window at a boy passing buy.  He asks what day it is.  He learns it is Christmas.  He sends the boy with money to buy a big Turkey to send to Bob Cratchit’s house.
He cleans up and takes to the streets.   He runs into but the men who had asked for a donation just 24 hours earlier.  They see Scrooge and wish to avoid him when he makes his apology for the man he has been.  He whispers in the ear of one of the men the amount he will give.  He is shock.  He whispers in the ear of his partner.
Scrooge says to them, “I have a great many years to make up”.

He then goes to his servant Bob Cratchit’s home with food and gifts.  He commits to them to be their loving partner in life to help with their family as if his own. 
Then he is off to his nephew’s home to share Christmas with him and his wife.  This story does not say they lived happily ever after.  You just know things are going to be different and much better than ever before because of the changed heart of one man.
What does all this have to do with Zaccheus?  I am so glad you asked because it has everything to do with Zaccheus.  Zaccheus was one of the Scrooges of his time.  He was a Jewish tax collector for the Romans and the temple.  He was a despised and hated short man.  He was so short that when he heard Jesus was coming by, he climbed up in a tree to have a look at him.
When Jesus passed by and saw him, Jesus called him down and invited himself to Zaccheus’s house.  The people were in shock.  Of all the places Jesus could go, why would he go to the home of a sinner tax collector.
You heard the scripture say that after Jesus had spent time at his house, we witness another man changed from following the money god of this world to the God of Israel Father of Jesus. 
Listen to what he says, “BEHOLD, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor; and if I have taken anything from any man by false accusation, I restore to him fourfold”.
When we are saved from our broke, busted and disgusted situation, we have a passion for cleaning up what we have messed up.  Making up for lost time is important. 
Scrooge made up for lost time.  Zaccheus made up for lost time.  What do you say now that we have this opportunity to make up for lost time?



Sunday, June 23, 2013

What Does it Mean to be a SOUL ALIVE?

What Does it Mean to be a Soul Alive?
Genesis 2 vss 5 - 7 (The Complete Jewish Bible)

5 there was as yet no wild bush on the earth, and no wild plant had as yet sprung up; for Adonai, God, had not caused it to rain on the earth, and there was no one to cultivate the ground. 6 Rather, a mist went up from the earth which watered the entire surface of the ground. 7 Then Adonai, God, formed a person [a] from the dust of the ground [b] and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, so that he became a living being, (a living soul, A SOUL ALIVE).

In this message from the Teaching Ministry of New Eden, learn what it means to be a living soul, a SOUL ALIVE.  When the Creator created man of the topsoil mud of wet dirt designing his form, he was still lifeless until God divested his and the God Community’s living nature into the lifeless man.  God blew into the openings of the man’s nose and the man became fully alive, fully conscious and self - aware, a living soul, a SOUL ALIVE. 

Discover your soul consciously aware of itself through your five plus senses of intuition, seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling and touching.  Observe how you can differentiate between you and everything else.  Your senses keep you aware of what is going on around you and how you should respond.


Being a SOUL ALIVE or a living soul means we have the power to connect with others like us.  Together we can build families and communities through friendship and relationship.  Together, we build a better world because that is the privileged power built into our living soul, our soul ALIVE.