Dear
Present Truth Magazine Subscriber:
We
are glad to have you as a subscriber to our Present Truth Magazine. Below
you will find articles from individual authors who have written for our
magazine. Our prayer for all who
receive read these articles is that the Lord "...may give to you the
Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the
knowledge of Him, the eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that you may
know what is the hope of His calling, and what are the riches of the glory of
His inheritance in the saints” (Ephesians 1:17-18).

Resurrection of the Dead
by A. Wilson Phillips
In America and the western world, many
traditions and beliefs have developed in regard to Easter and the
resurrection of the dead. The Easter bunny stories, the coloring of
eggs, new Easter cloths, and parades that many children and adults get
excited about are all part of our cultural celebration.
Many in the Christian communities have sunrise
services with devotional readings from the Bible, hymns, testimonials,
etc. Often they will have a fellowship breakfast following the sunrise
service. In truth, some of these participants have a spiritual
connection to the “resurrection life” of Christ and some do not.
Unfortunately, a lack of “spiritual connection” exists in many
traditional Christian gatherings, both public and private.
In the midst of the many traditional Christian
services and trappings, there are some precious biblical truths that we
can learn concerning the resurrection of the dead of Jesus Christ and
others.
The apostle Paul preached about the
resurrection of the dead using the writings of the Law and Prophets,
which were written to God’s covenant people about their redemptive
history. Defending his faith, he said,
But this I
confess to you, that according to the Way which they (Judaizers)
call a sect, so I worship the God of my fathers, believing all things
which are written in the Law and in the Prophets. I have hope in God,
which they themselves also accept, that there will be a resurrection
of the dead, both of the just and the unjust
(Acts 24:14-15).
In this passage, the use of the Greek word “mello,”
(meaning “about to be,” according to its various grammatical forms) has
great significance. Prophetically, Paul was saying, “There
is about to be (or come) a resurrection of the dead.” He
proclaimed this in about 63 A.D. The writings of Paul and the other
literary apostles reveal that they were expecting an “eminent” (soon)
return of Christ.
The “parousia” (par-ou-see-ah) has been
traditionally labeled “The Second Coming of Christ.” This traditional
label brings a misplaced hope to many sincere Christians today. Many in
the church world teach that this second coming is yet in our future.
This contradicts Paul’s and the other apostles’ writings.
Too many believers are waiting for resurrection
life, when they could be enjoying it today.
In about 65 A.D., Paul wrote a pastoral letter
to Timothy, who was in Ephesus, addressing some of the false teachings
of that day concerning the resurrection of the dead.
And their
message will spread like cancer. Hymenaeus and Philetus are of this
sort, who have strayed concerning the truth, saying that the
resurrection is already past; and they overthrow the faith of some
(2 Tim. 2:17-18).
Perhaps Hymenaeus and Philetus were referring
to the group of those who were resurrected just after Jesus
Christ was resurrected in 30 A.D.
Then, behold,
the veil of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom; and the earth
quaked, and the rocks were split, and the graves were opened; and many
bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep were raised; and coming out
of the graves after His resurrection, they went into the holy
city and appeared to many (Matt. 27:51-53).
God’s Word teaches us that there was a
resurrection of the dead of those who were held by Satan in Sheol
(Hades) from Adam until the coming of Christ (Heb. 2:14-15). This took
place during the transitional period between the old and new covenants.
In that He
says, “A new covenant,” He has made the first obsolete. Now what is
becoming obsolete and growing old is ready to vanish away
(Heb. 8:13).
The apostles’ writings make it plain that the
resurrection of Jesus Christ and others are the very foundation
on which our personal salvation rests today. These are not fringe
issues. Scripture says:
Therefore, just
as through one man sin entered the world, and death (spiritual
death) through sin, and thus death spread to all men, because all
sinned…Therefore we were buried with Him through baptism into death,
that just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the
Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. For
if we have been united together in the likeness of His death,
certainly we also shall be in the likeness of His resurrection, knowing
this, that our old man (nature) was crucified with Him,
that the body of sin might be done away with, that we should no longer
be slaves of sin. For he who has died has been freed from sin. Now if we
died with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with Him, knowing
that Christ, having been raised from the dead, dies no more. Death no
longer has dominion over Him. For the death that He died, He
died to sin once for all; but the life that He lives, He lives to
God. Likewise you also, reckon yourselves to be dead indeed to
sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus our Lord (Rom. 5:12, 6:4-11).
Our co-crucifixion, burial, and resurrection
with Christ assure us who are born again into Christ (baptized
into Christ) that we have resurrection life today.
When
we die physically, we will not go to Sheol, Hades, or purgatory. Rather,
we will transition into our “spiritual bodies” (1 Cor. 15:44), like the
“firstborn Son” of the new creation (Acts 13:30-33; Rom. 8:29).
In summary, we celebrate resurrection life
daily, which is a life that is free from sin, self (the old nature), and
Satan. Easter traditions and celebrations are opportunities to share His
life with others who have not yet “passed from death unto life” (1 John
3:14). The best is yet to come.
A. Wilson Phillips is the co-founding and senior
pastor of Abundant Life Covenant
Church.

Being Right
By Richard K. Clark
I’m embarrassed to admit that I have spent many
hours of my life endeavoring to convince someone (most often my wife)
that I was right about a particular subject. Even more embarrassing is
that the subject in question was rarely important enough for me to be
using up so much psychic energy. Talk radio, TV, news reporting,
politics, education, and our culture in general are filled with people
working diligently to prove their “rightness.” Sometimes they might even
be right and yet are wrong.
In the whole world there are only two kinds
(sources) of righteousness—self-righteousness and God’s
righteousness. The word “righteousness” simply implies “that which
is right,” and it is no secret that one of the driving forces in
humanity is the need to be right! Every person comes out of the womb
self-righteous and stays that way until the revelational light of Jesus
Christ shines into the heart.
In fact, everyone in the world is religious
because they either bow at the throne of their own righteousness or at
the throne of God’s righteousness. When Adam and Eve ate from the tree
of the knowledge of good and evil, they infected all their seed with
self-righteousness—mankind was separated from God, who is the only true
source of righteousness; therefore, sin made all of mankind spiritually
dead.
Apostle Paul (Saul of Tarsus) was born into a
world that should have understood true righteousness. They were the
covenant children of Abraham, the Israel of God, the recipients of the
Law and the Prophets. Yet, most of them had not humbled themselves to
their God and His Word and were intensely devoted to becoming more
“self-righteous.” As far as self-righteousness goes, Paul was the best
of the best. When Christ’s glorious light apprehended him, his whole
world and perspective drastically changed.
But what things
were gain to me, these I have counted loss for Christ. Yet indeed I also
count all things loss for the excellence of the knowledge of Christ
Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and
count them as rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in Him, not
having my own righteousness, which is from the law, but that
which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which is from God
by faith; that I may know Him and the power of His
resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to
His death, if, by any means, I may attain to the resurrection from the
dead (Phil. 3:7-11).
Paul had discovered that man can never lift
himself into the realm of God’s righteousness through good works and
good doctrine. Only as the supernatural work of God makes us alive in
Christ can we begin to know “right” and to become “right.” But it takes
more than just a new birth experience with God … we must become
disciples of Christ through His Word, Spirit, and Church. One of our
most important assignments in life is to be transformed by the renewing
of our minds (Rom. 12:1-2); otherwise, we are functioning with some of
Christ’s righteousness and some of our own righteousness. Jesus told His
disciples that it was possible for them to be “full of light having
no
part dark” (Luke 11:36). What a powerful statement to
ponder.
As we daily humble our hearts to obey the
living Word of God, we are partners in the miracle of transformation.
Paul said to “know Him” will take us through the process of death
to self and into resurrection life in Christ, which is our personal
on-going Easter experience. This world will know true change when more
and more of God’s people shine forth the light of Christ’s
righteousness.
Richard K. Clark is an associate pastor of Abundant Life Covenant Church.

The
Temple of God
By Benjamin Davis
Imagine the shock we would feel if someone we
believed in predicted the total downfall and dismantling of the federal
government with all of its programs. Social Security would be
dismantled. There would be no national defense, no federal tax, and no
central authority to build and repair our freeway system; no food and
drug administration to regulate medicine and the safety of food; no
national healthcare system for the elderly (Medicare); and no more
federal courts to settle disputes over abortion, first amendment rights,
or elections. This dismantling would cause a major economic and social
upheaval because so much of the economy and social welfare is built on
federal government spending. It would mean a complete change in the way
we Americans live.
At the latter end of Jesus’ ministry, He
declared a prophecy/prediction that stunned and shocked his listeners in
a similar way:
…Do you not see
all these things (the buildings of the Jewish temple)? Assuredly,
I say to you, not one stone shall be left here upon another, that shall
not be thrown down (Matt. 24:2).
Construction of the third temple, which was
also known as Herod’s temple, started around 20 B.C. The plans for it
were so extravagant that it was not finished until 63 A.D. In Jesus’
day, it was a fully functioning temple, but construction around it was
still under way. In prophesying this temple’s destruction, Jesus was
prophesying a cataclysmic event that would dramatically change the life
of every Jewish person.
After Jesus prophesied the temple’s
destruction, the apostles declared its irrelevance! To the apostles, the
physical temple was but a shadow of a new covenant reality: we who are
in Christ are the temple of God. Just a few years before Herod’s temple
was complete, Paul boldly proclaimed this truth to the Corinthians,
saying,
Do you not know
that you are the temple of God and that the
Spirit of God dwells in you? (1 Cor. 3:16)
He broadened this understanding when he wrote
to the Ephesians:
Now, therefore,
you are no longer strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the
saints and members of the household of God, having been built on the
foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the
chief cornerstone, in whom the whole building, being fitted together,
grows into a holy temple in the Lord, in whom you also are being
built together for a dwelling place of God in the Spirit (Eph.
2:19-22).
Historically speaking, the temple was the place
where God would manifest His presence and communicate with His people (2
Chr. 7:12-15). From the days that Solomon built the first temple, the
Jewish way of worship was not complete without it.
The Jews were looking for a temple that would
be grander than Solomon’s temple, and most thought that Herod’s temple
was that fulfillment. Both Haggai and Ezekiel prophesied a temple with a
greater glory than Solomon’s temple (Hag. 2:9; Ezek. 47). Jesus and his
apostles, however, revealed that Herod’s temple was like the Tower of
Babel in that it was a man-made attempt to fulfill these prophecies.
Like the Tower of Babel, it had to be destroyed so that God’s plans
could be fulfilled in the earth.
Ezekiel 47 describes the new covenant temple
that God would build. From this temple would flow rivers of living water
for the healing of the nations. The church of the living God is God’s
temple on the earth today, and in it Haggai’s prophecy is fulfilled:
“The glory of
this latter temple shall be greater than the former,” says the Lord
of hosts. “And in this place I will give peace,” says the Lord
of hosts (Hag. 2:9).
The apostles’ words are still being proclaimed
today:
...you also,
as living stones, are being built up a spiritual house, a
holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God
through Jesus Christ (1 Pet. 2:5).
Some today have left the apostles’ doctrine by
proclaiming that God’s plans can only be fulfilled in the rebuilding of
a Jewish physical temple. To succeed, they would need to tear down the
Dome of the Rock, which now stands on the Temple Mount. A new priesthood
would
have to be found to offer animal sacrifices, since all of the Jewish
records of priestly linage were destroyed in 70 A.D. This vision being
proclaimed by many conservative Christians is the source of much of the
Mideast conflict. The truth is that a new rebuilt temple in our day
would have no more spiritual or biblical significance than the St. Louis
Arch.
God’s plan in the earth is being fulfilled
through His temple, the church. Through His church, the earth is being
“…filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord”
(Hab. 2:14).
Benjamin Davis is an associate pastor of Abundant Life Covenant Church

Enduring Unpleasantness
by Jonathan Clark
For our light
affliction, which is but for a moment, is working for us a far more
exceeding and eternal weight of glory… (2 Cor. 4:17).
As I glanced down the front page of the morning
newspaper, I was intrigued by the headline “Forget Plastic Surgery; Try
‘Cosmetic Neurology.’” The article stated that Dr. Anjan Chatterjee, an
associate professor of neurology at the University of Pennsylvania,
believes that brain-affecting drugs, such as Ritalin, may begin to be
regularly used to “enhance” performance in normal people. The article
claimed that in the near future we could see a society in which
…healthy people
get cutting-edge drugs and treatments, not to cure disease, but to make
them “better” people… “We live in an environment where there is a lot of
pressure to excel,” said Anjan Chatterjee…(He) offered examples (of how
these drugs could be used):
Dr. Chatterjee also had some reservations about
medical treatments to enhance performance in normal people: “…struggling
with pain builds character…getting a boost without doing the work is
cheating” (Springfield News-Leader, 9-28-04; also referenced in
the Wall Street Journal, 10-1-04).
“Without doing the work.” This insightful
neurologist has discovered one of the keys to successful
living—character development requires work.
To thrive and be happy, all individuals must
continue to grow psychologically, emotionally, and spiritually, which
often requires unpleasant “growth work” (pressure, stress, pain,
boredom, unselfish choices, etc.). Character growth through enduring
unpleasantness will produce noble-mindedness and happiness that is not
dependent on environment or circumstances. Circumventing this necessary
growth process will produce “artificial-mindedness” with
environmentally-dependent happiness (no change in the inner man).
The apostle Paul encountered differences in
character between two of his fledgling Christian communities. He wrote
in Acts 17:11,
These (Bereans)
were more fair-minded than those in Thessalonica, in that they received
the word with all readiness, and searched the Scriptures daily to find
out whether these things were so.
The Berean Christians were willing to do the
work necessary to grow, with resultant character growth and
noble-mindedness. Apparently, the Thessalonian Christians were not as
eager to do this work, with resultant shallower character.
Paul also mentioned character development
through enduring unpleasantness when he wrote to the Roman Christians:
“…knowing that tribulation produces perseverance, and perseverance,
(produces) character…” (Rom. 5:3-4). Jesus’ own brother James
understood this as well when he wrote:
My brethren,
count it all joy when you fall into various trials, knowing that the
testing of your faith produces patience (endurance). But let
patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect and complete,
lacking nothing (James 1:2-4).
Both
of these apostles understood that enduring unpleasantness and growing
thereby would produce the character of God in an individual—and God is a
happy individual who has the ability to perform at the highest levels
possible! God’s happy character on the inside of any person will enhance
that person’s performance better than any plastic remedy.
Now to Him who
is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think,
according to the power that works in us…(Eph. 3:20).
Jonathan Clark is an elder of Abundant Life Covenant Church and a physician in
Springfield, Missouri.

God Is
Faithful
By Jim Hunt
I was born and raised in Rolla, Missouri, and went to Sunday school for
the first four or five years of my life. My mother eventually quit
taking us kids to church, and she herself seldom went after that. I
don’t know why she stopped, maybe because the church she attended built
a new building on the other side of town and it was too far to walk.
After going to college for a year, I dropped out and found a job. I had
felt guilty about my parents having to pay for college when they had so
little themselves. In June 1967 I entered the Army and was sent to
Vietnam as an infantryman. I was assigned to the 196th Light Infantry
Brigade in the I Corp.
One Sunday, after some very intense battles and firefights, we secured a
spot on the side of a mountain and were resupplied and given a hot meal.
A chaplain had come on the chopper and held several small services, one
of which I attended. I remember asking God to stop the killing and let
me go home in one piece. Not long after that Sunday, my company (about
85 men) found a North Vietnam Army base camp, and two of our guys were
killed and several wounded. The next morning after only a few minutes,
we had lost 46 more men who were killed or wounded. I was so disgusted;
I remember thinking “So much for prayer. Why do people really bother?”
Through the years the Holy Spirit quietly watched over me and began to
make obvious the reality of His presence. In 2003 the Holy Spirit chose
me to join in covenant with Jesus Christ and reveal the truth of the
Holy Kingdom.
Last summer I had just finished talking on the phone with one of the
men I served with in Vietnam, and after I hung up, the Holy Spirit
revealed that my prayer of so many years ago in fact was answered! The
killing indeed had stopped, and I did get home in one piece with a few
metal souvenirs! Prayers do get answered.
Jim Hunt is a retired postal worker.

The
Goodness of Affliction
by Leesa Hamilton
Before I was afflicted I went astray,
But now I keep Your word (Ps. 119:67).
Father,
Grant me the gift of adversity
When I reach the end of my frail humanity
And find in the darkness
The essence of life…YOU.
The joy of complete emptiness
In the struggle of self-sufficiency,
Where I surrender only to look
Into Your face and find divine joy.
Let me experience the
goodness of affliction
And rediscover the cleansing of the crucifixion,
The glory of a resurrected life
Co-reigning with heartfelt mercy and abiding truth.
For I welcomed the season of
refreshing
Where pressures and trials were lifted;
But I have found that staying here too long
Leaves me complacent and apathetic
To the things that occupy Your heart.
I have come to know
That poverty is not about money.
It’s about the emptiness of life lived
Without You at the center.
Peace is not the absence of
problems
Or the non-existence of war.
It is the absolute knowing that I am not
And yet You are…in total control,
And You are good.
Thank You for the gift of
affliction
Which you apply in just the right doses,
The medicine of the Great Physician
Who keeps me and makes me whole.
Leesa Hamilton and her husband Byron own
Med-Soft National Training Institute in Springfield, Missouri.

Addiction-Free Living
By Lisa Krueger
Several years ago
I came to a place where I believed I needed to quit smoking cigarettes.
They were becoming rather expensive, and an x-ray revealed some minor
lung damage.
I had tried to
quit previously but had actually ended up smoking more than before I
tried to stop. This time was different. I sat quietly before the Lord
and admitted that I could not be freed from this habit on my own. I
could not muster up enough willpower. This was one of my first lessons
on how not to be in control.
As I sat there, I
knew the Lord would equip me to overcome this physical addiction. I
thanked Him for helping me and began to walk out my deliverance. I went
to the store and purchased nicotine gum, my favorite flavor of
sugar-free gum, mints, and orange juice. I used the nicotine gum for
less than a week. I used it sparingly, replacing it with the regular
gum. When I would feel the urge to smoke, I would drink a glass of water
or juice and then use the gum or mints.
This all happened
in the spring of 1996. Later that year, I became pregnant for the second
time and was in my prenatal doctor’s waiting room reading a magazine.
The article I was reading said that vitamin C picks up nicotine from a
person’s system, and drinking juices high in vitamin C along with
appropriate daily amounts of water could help eliminate nicotine more
quickly and efficiently from the body. I sat in amazement as I reflected
back to what I had done—in obedience to the Lord—to help me quit
smoking.
I have an
all-knowing Father who took a teachable moment to make known His love
for me. He could have simply taken the unhealthy habit from me. Instead,
He orchestrated these events to help me see that as I trust and obey, He
will enable me to live an overcoming lifestyle.
Lisa Krueger is a homemaker in Springfield,
Missouri.

Building Faith With God
By Gavin Walker
I bought a business about a
year ago. It took a great act of faith on my part to do this because I
could see that I would have to grow the business in order to meet my
current income requirements. At my prior job, I had not needed as much
faith because no matter how bad I messed up or failed to trust in God,
the checks would keep coming every other week. In my mind, I knew that
my source of income was from God, but in practice it sure was easy to
become accustomed to the checks being deposited like clockwork.
During the past year, I have
learned many things—the most important being that faith in and with God
is the only way to run a business. My source is still God, but now I get
paid from many different customers and sources. This causes my income to
fluctuate greatly. There were many times this past year when I got busy
doing work and fell back into my old habit patterns of trying to bring
in business by my own steam rather than trusting in the Lord. Without a
renewed mind, this caused me to focus on the money rather than meeting
the needs of people.
I began to seek the Lord
first about where I needed to spend my time. He spoke to my spirit,
“Build relationships, and meet needs with a servant’s heart and
attitude.” I knew as I obeyed, He would be faithful to meet my needs.
I also started coming to the
Lord in faith to ask that my needs be met every month. When I
fail to do this, my finances show it. I have found that the Lord does
not necessarily meet my needs the moment I ask. Sometimes He will
wait—even until the last day. During one particular month, the Lord
provided what I asked for by bringing in over half of our month’s income
on the last business day of the month. Talk about stretching and
learning to lean on the Lord! The Lord is indeed good. He knew that if
He met my need on the first day of the month, I would have coasted the
rest of the month.
The Lord has also taught me
that it is my job to plant seeds of faith throughout the region and His
job to make it grow. Matthew 13:31-32 says:
He told them
another parable: “The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed, which a
man took and planted in his field. Though it is the smallest of all your
seeds, yet when it grows, it is the largest of garden plants and becomes
a tree, so that the birds of the air come and perch in its branches.”
Even though the seeds I am
planting may be small, the Lord is going to cause them to grow and
flourish into a prosperous business that will rightly represent the
kingdom in my community.
I titled this article
“Building Faith With God” because He is partnering with
me, giving me mustard seeds of faith. My part is to simply take them and
plant them.
Gavin Walker and his wife Cassandra own
MedTech Medical Management Systems in Springfield, Missouri.

The Music In My Ears
By Matt Christy
I have long been a
huge fan of music. As a kid, I had my own portable AM radio, which back
in that day still picked up rock-and-roll stations. By the time all the
good guitar rock fled to the land
of FM, I’d upgraded my player of choice to a handy little AM/FM
pre-Walkman unit. From there I later moved to the posh surroundings of
an AM/FM cassette boom box, circa 1986 styling, which inevitably gave
way to various portable tape decks, culminating in the radiantly bright
yellow waterproof Sony Walkman. These units all served me quite well,
allowing me to groove on all the best 70s and 80s rock and roll. Def
Leppard,
Dire Straits, Doobie Brothers, Pink Floyd… you name it, I listened to
it. Of course, having a brother four years older (and thus “in the
scene” as it were) had a big influence on the kinds of music to which I
listened.
As the years
rolled on, I eventually traded up my meager tape collection for the
magic of CDs. While still enjoying most popular music via radio, my CD
collection steadily grew as each paycheck found its way through my hands
to the local shops. While I tended to stay away from things like
hardcore gangster rap and the like, I still listened to more than my
fair share of heavy metal, grunge, punk, and techno-rave. I had heard of
this thing called “Christian music” growing like an aberration in the
music industry, but I paid it no attention. I believed all Christian
music catered to those acoustic guitar-strumming, “kum-bay-a singing”
hippies.
Of course, God had
a much different perspective.
I had long given
up my tired old Sony Discmans for an in-dash MP3 player for the car,
having converted all my many CDs to this new compression format so I
could keep them on my computer instead of in those racks along the wall.
I had been an “early adopter” of the new technology, and as such, I fell
into many bad (illegal) habits along the way. While my collection of
music had grown almost exponentially over the years, nothing compared to
the explosive growth incurred with a certain program which allowed me to
download music files from other people off the internet. I became the
worst sort of leech, downloading hundreds of songs at a time while never
sharing any of my own. I only cared about having copies of all the songs
I’d enjoyed listening to growing up. At first, it didn’t occur to me
that downloading songs from the internet was illegal. By the time
Metallica started suing people for downloading their music, my pride
kept me in deception; I thought I wasn’t hurting anything since I didn’t
share my collection with anyone.
During this time,
I encountered Christian music again, with far better results than
earlier experiences. I discovered there were many groups on the scene I
actually enjoyed. Eventually—fairly early in the overall picture of
musicians’ rights and RIAA litigation—I stopped downloading MP3s.
In 2001, Apple
Computer released the paradigm-shifting gem known simply as iPod.
Recognized for my “gadget geekery” of the first degree, I coveted after
this prize of music portability. I watched like a kid through a toy
store window as the iPod evolved over the years. Finally, in 2003, I
purchased the ultimate in portable music enjoyment. Soon after my iPod
arrived in the mail, I copied over my entire collection and popped the
ear buds in to enjoy my new toy. Immediately I noticed just how much the
ear buds hurt to wear. Having had buds in the past, I knew it could take
some time for my ears to acclimate to the new method of music delivery
and thus decided to simply put up with the pain for the gain of true
music portability.
I began
systematically deleting certain groups of MP3s from my collection, and
my fiancée encouraged me to give up secular music entirely, as she had
been shown to do early on in her rededication to following Holy Spirit’s
direction. I resisted at first, but as she continued to show me new
groups, I discovered Christian music I enjoyed—groups like Jars of Clay,
Skillet, Caedmon’s Call, Jennifer Knapp.
I opened my heart to Holy Spirit and began deleting more and more of my
collection.
But my ears still
really hurt when listening to the iPod.
I tried new
headphones, different lengths of time between listening and not
listening, and even different orientations of the headphones to try and
alleviate the pain. No matter what I tried, as soon as I turned the iPod
on, my ears started hurting. After about three months of fidgeting,
fussing, and fighting with my iPod’s earphones and buds, I happened upon
a nice quiet time of listening to the iPod without my ears hurting. Upon
further investigation, I realized I had been listening to Christian
music at the time. I decided to investigate a little further,
reformatting my iPod and only copying over Christian music. The next
day, I plugged in the headphones and, to my surprise, not a bit of ear
pain the entire day. On day two of the experiment, I plugged in the long
forgotten ear buds and headed off to work. Again, I experienced no ear
pain the entire day.
That night, I went
through my entire collection, and if it wasn’t Christian (and legally
obtained), I deleted it. My original collection ballooned to more than
2800 songs. After the purge, I had fewer than 600 songs. Now, less than
a year later, my wife and I have over 7600 songs in our collection, all
Christian, all legal.
God showed me
through this experience it was not the manner in which I listened to the
music but rather the music itself that caused the pain. Legal issues
aside (I no longer endorse piracy in any form), the content in the music
directly affected the pain I felt in my ears. The Lord showed me the
messages those old songs put forth were no longer fit for me to listen
to as a new creation believer, as they affected both my thoughts and my
heart.
Music has always
been an integral part of my life. It affects both my moods and my
attitudes. I choose now, however, to follow Christ’s leading and listen
only to music which influences those moods and attitudes after His own
heart.
And my iPod ear
buds feel great!
Matt Christy is an information technology support specialist
for the Springfield Public Schools.