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What Questions Are Christians Asking?

What are the subjects that are of most interest to believers? Here is our top 20 list based on  2,355 calls to the People to People radio broadcast over the last three years.
1. Salvation 124 Calls
2. Forgiveness 105 Calls
3. Marriage 70 Calls
4. Prayer 62 Calls
5. Christian Living 56 Calls
6. Baptism 52 Calls
7. Sin 48 Calls
8. Faith 47 Calls
9. The Church 46 Calls
10. Divorce/Remarriage 45 Calls
11. Death 43 Calls
12. Doctrine/Truth 38 Calls
13. The Holy Spirit 37 Calls
14. Tithing/Giving 34 Calls
15. New Covenant 32 Calls
16. Revelation 32 Calls
17. Jesus 31 Calls
18. Grace 31 Calls
19. Assurance 30 Calls
20. Rapture 25 Calls
Which of these subjects hold the most interest for you? In future posts, I will write about these subjects matters and offer up questions to spark interaction. Concerning future posts, I will be uploading those on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
I look forward to hearing about the subjects you want to know more about.

First Life, Then Change

I was sitting at my desk one day, doing my normal work stuff, and the phrase,”first life, then change,” popped into my mind. Most thoughts I have during a day race through my head and then quickly disappear. This one stuck. It turned out to be one of those “aha” moments for me.
First life, then change is the process God works in our lives.
So many of us short circuit the process. We leave the life part out of the equation, and focus merely on the change we hope and pray God can bring to our lives. In other words, we view Christianity as a self-improvement program. God is there to help us better our lives. At least that was the way I viewed Christianity. Like so many, I cried out to God time and time again for His help, but nothing changed. If anything, my feeble efforts made matters worse. I didn’t know that I needed life.
However, Scripture is very clear. I was dead in sin (Ephesians 2:1). Not just me, you too were dead in sin. This is the spiritual condition that was passed on to you by your mom and dad. This ancestry trail traces back to Adam and Eve. They forfeited spiritual life in exchange for the chance to be like God. The decision plunged them and all of mankind into the realm of sin and death.
We hear the echoes of this reality at times. We sense deep down that something is terribly wrong, or feel emptiness inside, or experience an unexplained restlessness. All of these are symptoms of spiritual death. Some ignore these indicators. Others charge out to find that one thing to fill the void. But money, power, prestige, fame or anything else the world may offer are never enough. They leave us still wanting. Death needs to be turned to life.
Calvin spent much of his life trying to fill the emptiness of his heart. He had tried almost everything imaginable, but nothing worked. He turned to drugs and alcohol to mask the underlying pain and emptiness. Even then, he could hear the echoes. Something was wrong. All his prayers seemed to go unanswered. His struggle to change led him to a point of desperation. He turned on his radio hoping to find answers. Scanning the dial, he landed on the station that airs our program in his area. Something caught his attention. He picked up his phone and called our toll-free number.
You could hear the weariness in his voice. “I’ve tried to do the right things. I pray for God’s help night and day, but I keep going back to my old ways. Is there hope?”
I had the privilege of sharing with Calvin God’s process, first life, then change. It struck a chord with him. Thousands listened in as he expressed his heart of faith through prayer. That day, God raised Calvin spiritually so that he could live in the newness of life. I could hear the power of what was happening in his voice. Calvin, just minutes before was dead in sin. But now he was alive in Christ.
The offer of the Gospel is life. Jesus made this abundantly clear throughout His teaching ministry. Listen to His words: I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it abundantly” (John 10:10). Once we are alive in Him, the change begins.

10 Insights from Conference 220

Here are several things that struck me from Conference 220. I wish all of you could have been there. It was a powerful conference. We plan to do it again next year. Stay tuned for details.

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  1. Love benefits others at the expense of self. Sin benefits self at the expense of others. Frank Viola
  2. We need to pray for a new, fresh revelation of Jesus Christ. He wipes everything else off the table. Frank Viola
  3. The Christian life is becoming what we already are. Frank Viola
  4. Jesus is our forgiveness once and for all. Jesus is our life moment by moment. Andrew Farley
  5. The New Covenant invites us to be obsessed with Jesus Christ. Andrew Farley
  6. We participated in Christ’s death, burial, resurrection, ascension, and seating at the right hand of the Father. Andrew Farley
  7. Christianity is not a self-improvement program. Bob Christopher
  8. Jesus lives in us. With Him in our lives, we should have great expectations concerning the Christian life. Bob Christopher
  9. When we die to human effort, we come alive to the fullness of God’s love and grace. Bob Christopher
  10. It is easier to trust someone when you know that they love you. Pete Briscoe

Conference 220

Today is day one of Conference 220.
I will be tweeting throughout the conference. To follow the thread or to join the conversation on Twitter, use #220.
Galatians 2:20 is the conference theme. “I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.”
This verse lays out the best news ever – the Christian life is 100% Jesus. I tried to live the Christian life. You have too. We can’t do it. But Jesus can, and He does through us.
We simply trust Christ, or as Paul wrote we “live by faith in the Son of God.”
This is such a freeing message. Those who take it to heart experience peace and rest.
How has this passage impacted your life?

The Biggest Problem in the Church Today

Last Thursday, Pete Briscoe was our special guest on People to People. You can listen to the program here.
He is the lead pastor at Bent Tree Bible Church in Plano, TX. He is one of the voices on the Telling the Truth radio broadcast along with his parents, Stuart and Jill Briscoe.
Pete will be sharing his personal grace awakening this Saturday morning at Conference 220. By the way, there is still room if you would like to attend. All the information is here.
During the broadcast, Pete shared an illustration. One Sunday, as he was teaching from Galatians, he stopped a moment, pulled out a bottle of 10w40 oil and poured a little bit into his coffee cup. He stirred the drink and then lifted the cup to his lips to take a drink.
Oil_and_Water_Do_Not_MixThe congregation shrieked.
Pete responded, “What’s the big deal? I just put a little bit of oil in the coffee.”
Even that little bit presented a danger to Pete’s health.
That was his point concerning law and grace. You can’t mix the two. The law had a purpose. When that purpose was fulfilled in our lives, the law gave way to grace. Now, the grace of God is in charge. My last post covered this topic.
Since we are so comfortable with the law, we naturally want to blend a little law in with the pure grace of God. Religion sends this message to us as well.
Even a little law mixed in with grace can lead to big problems in the Christian life. Talked to just about any Christian on the planet and you will hear them use words like frustration, guilt, fear, shame, struggling and failure to describe their Christian experience.
This is a sure sign that somewhere along the way, they poured a little law into their coffee cup of grace.
Paul explained the problem: “A little yeast works through the whole batch of dough.” If we let just a speck of the law in, it want be long until the law is ruling the roost in our lives. You cannot mix law and grace.
It was the biggest problem of the church in Paul’s day. It is the biggest problem in the church today.
It is time for us to fully embrace the grace of God and allow His Spirit to lead us, to guide us into all truth, and to transform us into the image of Christ Jesus.
In your life, how have you mixed law and grace? What was the result.

Who is in Charge — Law or Grace?

This month on People to People, our theme is law and grace. This particular subject is one of the sweet spots of our ministry.
Understanding the purpose of the law and the purpose of grace is the key to experiencing freedom as a believer.
The law made our need for Jesus very clear. It judged us guilty of sin, condemned us and showed us that we were spiritually dead. And that is where it left us. There is nothing more it could do.
Here is the scoop on the law. It cannot save us. It merely shows us that we need to be saved.
Grace saves us.
Jesus removes the judgment and condemnation of sin. Jesus makes us right with God. Jesus gives us life.
That’s grace.
When this act of grace occurred, the law was satisfied. Its purpose was fulfilled. There was nothing more for it to do. The law gave way to grace.
Now grace is fully in charge. We are led by the Spirit.
Under the law, we were bound up, slaves to sin and death. Under grace we are free. Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom” 2 Corinthians 3:17 (NIV).