Cook County News Herald

Hey! How ya been?





 

 

Wow! It seems like forever since we’ve had a chance to just sit down and talk like this. How have you been? I’m sure so much has happened in your life since we met last. I know I’ve been busy.

Winter wasn’t too bad this year. Yeah, not too much snow, and I don’t remember that we had so many days of below zero temperatures either. I suppose winter weather in northeast Minnesota is a little like what I’ve heard about having a baby: that the pain is intense during delivery but soon forgotten in the aftermath of new life. Not having had that experience personally, I can only assume there is some truth there.

Have you heard any good jokes lately? Carson Haring sent me one the other day and Bobbie B. emails me some from time to time. Oh, I’d love to share them with you, but that would be like a long time county resident revealing their most successful fishing hole or blueberry patch. You just have to get out there and find your own. I know you understand.

What can I tell you, then? Well . . . let me see. Christmas came and went.

The local Salvation Army Service Unit got involved in assisting some friends and neighbors and I helped with that. Cornerstone invited the local community to Easter dinner. Had 110 people come and eat with us. Really nice folks, too. I met some I had not met before. Linda and I went to a conference in Louisville, Kentucky after Easter. It was called “Together for the Gospel.” Seven thousand pastors. You should have heard them sing!

What did I like best? Being in the south was good. Okay, it was great.

Redbud and dogwood blooming. Sunshine. Eighty degrees with a light breeze. Sweet tea. (Why tea is seasonal on the North Shore I believe I will never understand.)

Oh, you meant about the conference. That’s easy. Eight excellent messages on the validity and necessity of an uncorrupted gospel in our day from wise and brilliant men through whom God spoke.

The gospel? Surely you know what the gospel is—the good news about Jesus.

Never heard of it, you say. Well here it is in a nutshell. God created human beings to enjoy God’s glory and love in a face-to-face relationship that would be their deepest joy forever, but those human beings declined God’s offer. They disobeyed God. They sinned. Their sin separated them from God with nary a hope of ever getting back into His good graces. They couldn’t help themselves. They were sunk, and all their children after them were sinners and separated from God, subject to the penalty of death, and without hope in the world.

Even though God was perfectly just and righteous in condemning their sin, God loved human beings. He loves you and he loves me, and he does not want us to suffer the penalty of eternal separation from him. He wants us folks to know his love, his goodness, his mercy and his glory, so he did the most amazing thing.

God came into the world himself. He took on flesh. God became a man, the man Jesus Christ. Jesus lived the life we all should have lived but couldn’t. Jesus was innocent, sinless, and because he was God, he was eternally innocent and sinless. Because he was God he could offer his innocent and sinless life in exchange for all of us. He could take the penalty of death for every sinner that ever did or ever will live, including the penalty for your sins and mine. And that is just what he did. Jesus died on the cross giving his life in death in exchange for us.

Now, when we believe in Jesus and trust our lives to him in faith, God forgives our sin on account of Jesus. He changes our heart and our inclination toward sin, and he gives us eternal life with Jesus. Through faith in Jesus, God reinstates the relationship we declined by our sin. We no longer have to be afraid of what God thinks of us, because now we know that He loves us. He sent Jesus to die in our place. No greater love has any man than this, that he lays down his life for his friend. Jesus laid down his life for us as a clear expression of God’s love for us.

Yes! God loves you. Yes. Even though you did that. Yes, even though you think that way sometimes. Yep, even then. Yes. Listen, there is no sin, no guilt, no shame you can mention, nothing you can confess in the past or the present that God doesn’t already know about and has already decided about.

He loves you. Jesus died for you before you did any of those things. He loved you before you ever gave him a reason. He loves you now. He loves you always.

That’s the Good News.

Each month a member of the
Cook County Ministerium
will offer Spiritual Reflections.
For May, our contributor
is long-time Cook County
Star contributor Pastor
Dale McIntire. Pastor Dale
has served as pastor of the
Cornerstone Community
Church in Grand Marais since
April of 1995.


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