Archive - August, 2010

Seeing the fullness of what Jesus accomplished

Seeing Jesus from heaven’s perspective, we can begin to understand why his sacrifice is more than enough for our forgiveness and our new life. Jesus didn’t only give up his supremely powerful position as the almighty Son of God when he came to earth as a son of man; he actually gave up everything upon the cross. Jesus loved us so much, that upon the cross he gave up all that he was. He became like us in his death, so that through his resurrection we could become like him!

Jesus was the light of the world, yet for our sake he hung in darkness upon the cross, so that through him we could become light in the Lord. He was the righteousness of God, and for our sake became the sin of man, so that we could be holy in the eyes of God. He was the life of God, and yet he tasted death, followed by judgement for the sins of the world, so that we would never have to be condemned. Jesus was innocent of any rebellion against God, yet for our sake he took the cup of God’s wrath out of our hands and drank it on our behalf, so that we, now innocent in God’s eyes, could freely drink from the cup of communion with God.

Jesus experienced all of the consequences of rebellion against God, so that we would experience all of the benefits of being God’s beloved children. He took every punishment, every pain, every suffering, every sin and every rebellious act against God. All of these things were nailed to Jesus as he was nailed to the cross. Jesus took upon the cross everything that could ever separate us from God, so that we could have confidence in being united with God for all of eternity.

The reason we qualify to be radically loved is not because we have earned it by our own efforts, it is because Christ has qualified for us. Jesus did it all. This is the finished work of Christ. This is the perfect picture of God’s grace for our lives.

The cross reveals why we can trust that his grace for our lives is sufficient. It is what our entire walk of faith is founded upon. We do not spend our lives trying to finish God’s work; we rest in the knowledge that Jesus has finished everything on our behalf. It is this revelation that allows us to live as we truly are: free from sin and free from religious obligations—free to live a life of love.

Jesus is the reason that we can walk our journey of faith with this heavenly mindset, and not be burdened by a religious mindset of spiritual debt. Christ has paid for everything. As far as God is concerned, all debts owed to him have been paid. Because of this, we can have peace before him. When we feel that we still owe God, we can not rest in his presence. Instead, we forever try to pay off our debt to him through spiritual disciplines, and in the process fail miserably to live up to our own religious standards.

In Christ you can be assured God is not relating to you based on how much you pray or read your Bible. He is not counting how many people you share your faith with, nor how much money you give away. Naturally in our journey of faith we may do these things, however they are not an obligation or God’s measuring stick regarding your spiritual condition. They are simply a response to the reality of our salvation.

God is always speaking to you with love, and reminding you of Jesus; the one who paid the debt on your behalf. God wants you to rest in his presence with the knowledge that Christ has made you acceptable before him in every way.

Jesus is the reason we can confidently accept every blessing God pours out upon us. Everything is given freely to us, because of what Jesus has done on our behalf.

When we live with the revelation of Christ’s finished work, the power of God moves radically in us, and that same power outworks his will in our lives. That great power is Christ himself, for he is in us, and he is our hope of glory!

Praise Jesus, for he is worthy. He laid down everything, that we may be given everything. He became the son of man, so that by grace we could become sons of God.

Exerpt from my new book: Look! The finished work of Jesus

The Watered-Down Alter Call

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Pastor Moses seems to have some very clever, and perhaps a little dodgy, ways to ensure there are always people raising their hands during his alter calls.

Eric’s ‘Friendly’ Reminder

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Eric loves to smack people with his favorite scripture “Faith without works is dead”, but John wonders if Eric has ever actually thought through what he is saying. After all, surely Eric can see that John does have ‘works‘ in his life, it’s just that John doesn’t always talk about them like Eric , but rather John chooses to talk about the greatness of Jesus and our faith in his finished work upon the cross.

Apparently, Eric isn’t sure that John does, in fact, have good works in his life. Yes, that’s right, Eric thinks it’s entirely possible John has no good works, nada, not even one. There is only one thing Eric is sure of, and that is, according to his super spiritual instinct, John is, well, Bogey Manned.

Regular Pastoral Duties

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There’s no doubt Pastor Moses does do some spiritual things during his day, but what does he regularly do with the majority of his time? Well, I guess only Pastor Moses knows…

Note from Mick: What makes my comic strip funny (I hope, anyway) is  in part due to the extreme silliness of Pastor Moses.  This particular comic, for example,  is not expressing how I think ‘pastors’ in general spend their time, but rather just how I feel Pastor Moses spends his time. It’s hard to explain, but the longer the comic goes on, the more the characters take on a life of their own. Pastor Moses has become far sillier than I first imagined him to be, but I feel that only makes him all the funnier a character :-)

Foreword by Steve McVey

I thought it would be a good idea to share the forward of my new book Look! The finished work of Jesus with you all. It was written by a great gospel preacher and author Steve Mcvey.

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Many books have been written about Jesus Christ that inspire us to want to know him more intimately. While that’s an admirable goal for an author, the book you are about to read does something greater. Look! The finished work of Jesus doesn’t just cause the reader to hunger to know him more; it fills that very hunger by presenting Jesus in such a way that you actually sense his loving embrace as you read the book.

As I read this book, I found myself delighting again and again in some of the things Mick Mooney has written here. While this book will certainly teach you, it does more than that; it will touch you with a personal awareness of divine agape being expressed to you even as you read. More than once I felt as if my Father’s arms were holding me close while his voice whispered of his love to me through these chapters.

Religion complicates and confuses people by its demands and harsh scrutiny of our behaviour. The grace of God stands in stark contrast to religion by assuring us that because of the finished work of Jesus, we are not only in good standing with God but are actually cherished by him. Grace frees us from trying to prove anything to him, to others or even to ourselves. Mick has a firm grasp on that reality and writes in a way that causes others to understand it too.

The religious climate of the world today promotes the idea that we need to do certain things to earn God’s blessings and to make spiritual progress. This is a book that is counter-cultural to the world of legalism. It points us to Jesus Christ and causes us to see and really believe that what he has done on our behalf is indeed sufficient and that there is nothing left for us to do other than live out of the reality of his finished work.

I predict that Look! The finished work of Jesus is going to be used by our Father to set many people free from the prison of religious performance and usher them into the rest that only comes by living in his grace.

Steve McVey
Author, Grace Walk

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You can check out my book on Amazon by Clicking here

(FYI: If you don’t have a Kindle that’s no problem, as amazon have many free reading applications that you can download and then read any kindle book directly from your computer, or even your phone.)

Blue skies,
Mick

Super-Spiritualising Everything – Part 2

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Eric is sure John has a bogey man in him, why else wouldn’t he be serving in church? John on the other hand simply wishes Eric would be open to listen to his thoughts about life, church and the gospel without immediately thinking he must be possessed by some spiritual bogey man.

Eric of course would never actaually listen to John’s thoughts, for he has been well indoctrinated to automatically believe that anyone who isn’t obsessed with Pastor Moses’ vision must certainly be filled with, well, bogey men.

This Is The Gospel

Today I would like to share the first message from a long series based on Paul’s letter to the Romans. I started this series a few months ago and I’m currently up to chapter 10.

I’d really recommend taking the time to have a listen to this message, and if you enjoy it you can continue to listen to the following messages whenever you have the time.

You can listen to the first message here: The Gospel Of God’s Grace

God’s Greatest Love – It’s You!

What does God want from you? The truth is radical, glorious and all together life changing: God wants you to allow him to love you.

God doesn’t what you to perform an outward action, but to allow an inner one. He wants permission to love you with all that he is, for you truly are the love of his life. You as a person; as an individual.

It’s amazingly good news: You’re the one God loves; you’re the one he adores. You’re his joy; you are his treasure. When God looks upon you he sees that his dreams have come true.

I preached this message today. Have a listen and enjoy the reality of God’s personal love for you!

You can listen below:

God's Greatest Love - It's You! ()

Mick Mooney, August 21, 2010
Part of the Searching for grace series, preached at a Web message service

What does God want from you? God wants you to allow him to love you. You as a person, as an individual. It's amazingly good news: You're the one God loves; you're the one he adores. You're his joy; you are his treasure. When God looks upon you he sees that his dreams have come true.

Tags: weekend preaching

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Taking Spiritual Authority

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John doesn’t serve in church, and Eric just can’t understand why. To Eric, allowing the Spirit to lead John to serve God outside the 1 hour religious church program on Sunday is just an impossibility.

Eric is convinced that anyone who doesn’t jump into to serving the church must be, to put it plainly, possessed by the bogey man of laziness… Hmmmm

Understanding Significance

It seems this world is spinning faster and faster. We only have a precious few years, 80 or so if we’re lucky, to experience life on this planet. In the grand scheme of eternity, that really is a short time, and it’s a tragedy to live those years feeling insignificant.

I must admit, it’s easy to do. It’s easy to look at what other people have accomplished, the success they have achieved and their significance in the eyes of society, and feel we have some how missed the boat; we’ve fallen short. It’s all too easy to feel we’ve landed in the vast ocean called ‘insignificance’. It’s easy to look at people who ‘are’ significant, and conclude that we, being so far behind such people, ‘are not.’

But, if we ever do think in such a way, we would only be fooling ourselves, for it is quite clearly not the truth. The truth is that we are incredibly significant, every one of us. Regardless if we’ve never succeeded in anything we’ve attempted, or if we’ve never attempted anything to begin with. It’s regardless if we’ve failed time and time again, or if we’ve never started anything because of the fear of possible failure. It’s regardless of the missed opportunities, foolish decision, or wasted years. It’s regardless if society tells us we are insignificant and thinks we are at the bottom of the pile; irrelevant, unpopular and unknown. Despite any, or all, of these things, you still are significant – but why?

You are significant because God thinks you are. Now that may sound simple, but I can assure you it is divinely profound. It can come as a shock at first, but it really is quite logical. Significance is, after all, not really about what you do, but about what others think of you.

Now, in the world, what others think about you has everything to do with ‘what you do’, but in God’s eyes it’s different. In God’s eyes, your significance has nothing to do with ‘what you do’; rather it’s got everything to do with ‘who God is‘. God is love, and without a doubt he loves you incredibly. He loves you so much he was actually willing to let his divine Son die for you. In fact he Jesus was not only willing, but he actually did die for you.

It’s easy for us to accept that Jesus is truly significant in the eyes of God; he has, after all, ‘accomplished’ so much (you know, he did create all things, that’s a pretty big accomplishment by anyone’s standards.) and I think that’s why, in part, Jesus laid down his life for us. He wanted us to know just how significant we are in the eyes of our Father in heaven. God actually finds us as significant as Jesus himself. So much so that he allowed Jesus to lay down his life for us, that we could actually become like him, one with him – as significant as him.

The reality is that God doesn’t consider someone significant because of what they accomplish, but rather because he is Love, it’s his nature, and he loves his children wildly and completly. Jesus, who ‘did‘ so much, is ultimately not considered significant by God for his works, but for his sonship. God desires that we also recognise our significance in our sonship.

I believe that it is only through the revelation of Jesus, and the reality of his love for us, that we can rest in the truth of our own significance. Sure, the world may disagree, but we know that God doesn’t, for he is the one who makes us significant.

The world will always push you to strive to become someone significant; Jesus simply asks you to rest in the knowledge that you are significant to him.

What good news! You are significant, not based on what you do or accomplish, but based on the fact that God considered you significant enough to not only die for, but even more than that, significant enough to unite himself to you for the rest of eternity, living forever with him in his endless love.

If God thinks you are this significant, then I choose to see you that way too. You are so loved.

Written by Mick Mooney

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