Author Archives: Alan Simmons

Why visual perception is never enough

DSCF0125During the late spring and throughout summer, my family and I enjoy going to various state and national parks within a day-trip radius of our home in Henderson, Kentucky.  One Saturday morning, we drove to Marengo Cave, located near Marengo, Indiana.  About thirty minutes through the tour, we entered a large chamber that had a shallow pond near the path.  I don’t remember all that the tour guide told us, but I do remember how the pond gave the appearance of the chamber having another level underneath the one we were on.  The guide did invite the group to come further into the chamber and see the shallow pond.  Conversations and laughter erupted among our group as we began to realize that the lower level was nothing more than a reflection in a pond less than an inch and a half deep. We all were guilty of having a mistaken impression of the cavern’s chamber based on its visual appearance.

Last night, during the Sunday evening worship service at our church, the pastor, Alan Ramsey, discussed that we must understand that our race, as individual Christians and as a church, is not the same race that God has ordained for others.  God has placed before each of us our own race; the trials, tribulations, and blessings we are given are uniquely crafted especially for us by God.  As our pastor continued on his point, he began to talk about how each church has been given certain talents, abilities, and blessings to accomplish the tasks that God has set before it.  Each church, just like each Christian, has its own race to run and should not be concerned with what other churches are doing but should focus on the tasks at hand.  Too many times, Christians get off track when we start determining our spiritual growth and outlook to what other Christians are doing.  While it is natural for us to want to model our lives and spiritual walk after those we perceive of having a strong relationship with God, we must keep in mind that the only true measure of our spiritual growth must be the only true measure – God’ word, the Bible.

I have made the mistake of measuring my spiritual walk to those that I thought were more spiritual than myself.  At one point, I even based my decisions on which church to attend based on the building’s appearance, its size, and the number of cars in the parking lot on Sundays and Wednesday night.  I was doing on a much larger scale of what the apostle Paul warned us about:  Do ye look on things after the outward appearance? If any man trust to himself that he is Christ’s, let him of himself think this again, that, as he is Christ’s, even so are we Christ’s (II Corinthians 10:7).  In this particular text, Paul was reminding the Christians at Corinth that appearance alone should not be the basis of Christian fellowship.  We can make the broader application that we should not base our decisions about where to attend and serve in a church based on its appearance.  Even the Lord Christ Jesus taught on this very subject, as recorded in the gospel of John: Judge not according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment (John 7:24).

When we judge on appearance we become blinded to the truth and become focused on the perception.  Just as I did when I was trying to find a church based on its outward appearance, as I began to visit those churches, I noticed that it was not the large buildings, the full parking lots, or even the well manicured church lawns where I felt the presence of God the most.  In many occasions, it was obvious that something was missing from the church.  Sure, they had great music, a piano player, and maybe even a choir, but the presence of the Lord wasn’t there.  Instead of being Christ centered, something else had become the focus of the church; maybe it was a mission field, a new project, or maybe a person that the church was now focused on.  There’s also a danger when we try and use the physical appearance of people we deem as Christians – they may have all the outward appearances of a love for Christ yet inside their hearts is empty, void of the true joy that Christ can give.

If we truly have the light of Christ dwelling in us we should not want to or be able to contain its transforming glow.  As Jesus taught and as recorded in three of the gospels: Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the house (Matthew 5:15).  As a child of God, I should have a desire to follow Christ and his teachings that not only impacts my own being but should be evident to others.  The Lord Jesus Christ doesn’t come into our hearts just so we can continue to live like the lost world around us but so that others may see the joy and blessings and we can give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear (I Peter 3:15b).  There is a difference in what others perceive about us when we act like we are Christians and when we actually walk the Christian path that the Lord has set before us.  This is why Jesus taught his disciples that Ye shall know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? (Matthew 7:16).  It’s not enough to appear as a follower of the Lord Jesus Christ; a true Christian will bear fruit that not only identifies them as a Christian, but will also bear witness of Christ.

A lesson of reflecting God as taught by a setting Moon

Ohio River at Moonset

[Author’s note:  This year, I am making a conscious effort not to do anything on Sundays except for church and spending time with my family.  As a Christian, I feel that it is important to make the day that Christians choose to worship – Sunday – different than the rest of the week.  With this in mind, although this entry is posted on a Sunday, it was actually written beforehand.] 

This picture was taken back in late November as the mornings began to grow colder with the approach of winter.  As the moon was setting early in that cool and crisp morning I was captivated by the dark blues, purples, and hints of various shades of pink that accompanied the moon as it passed below the horizon.  I took this picture not knowing if it would even capture the slightest beauty of the moment.  A few days later, when I was uploading the pictures to my computer, I noticed that not only was the moment captured, but it turned out remarkably well – including the reflection of the moon on  the Ohio River.  As I look at that picture, I think of how we are called to reflect the love of Christ in our daily lives – not just to fellow believers but to all that we come into contact with during the day.

I know that in my own life I have struggled with this continually.  How can one reflect the love of Christ to those who have hurt us in the past?  How do we reflect that love to those who do not understand our dedication to Christ and openly ridicule our commitment to attend church and actively participate in its programs? How can we reflect the love of Christ to those who have not accepted what Jesus has done for them?  This is where I have learned that true Christianity is not just a religion but is also a life philosophy.  True Christianity should shape how we understand and relate not only to God, but to ourselves, to others, and to the world around us.  It is a real struggle for many, including myself, to willingly reflect the selfless love that Christ has shown to those that we have deemed unworthy to accept such unmerited grace.  However, just as the Ohio River didn’t have to think about reflecting the moon’s light on that cold November morning, we should not have to think about reflecting the love of Christ; it should come naturally and with very little effort.

I am reminded of the story of Moses and how during the exodus out of Egypt he went to the top of Mount Sinai and stayed for forty days and nights in the presence of the Lord.  As recorded in the book of Exodus: And it came to pass, when Moses came down from mount Sinai with the two tables of testimony in Moses’ hand, when he came down from the mount, that Moses wist not that the skin of his face shone while he talked with him. And when Aaron and all the children of Israel saw Moses, behold, the skin of his face shone; and they were afraid to come nigh him (Exodus 34:29-30). Moses’ shining was the direct result of him being in the presence of the Almighty God; as he communed with God he began to take on the characteristics of God – the same light we read about Moses radiating was nothing more than a reflection of the holiness of God. In the New Testament we also see Jesus radiating light in Mark 9:3 as he communed with Moses, Elijah, and his three disciples.  The only difference is that while Moses was simply reflecting the light, Jesus IS the light: Then spake Jesus again unto them, saying, I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life (John 8:12).  When we have the light of life that Christ gives, we too, should be able to reflect that great selfless love that he willingly gives us.

As we go about our daily routines, there are two basic types of people we come into contact with – those who have been saved by accepting the free gift of salvation as offered by God, and the others are lost.  The apostle Paul wrote to the church at Thessaloniki: And the Lord make you to increase and abound in love one toward another, and toward all men, even as we do toward you: To the end he may stablish your hearts unblameable in holiness before God, even our Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all his saints (I Thessalonians 3:12-13).  Not only are we to reflect the love of the Lord Jesus Christ to fellow believers but also to those who are lost.  For those who are lost, the love of Christ we have within us should be drawing us to bear witness of that love: And of some have compassion, making a difference:  And others save with fear, pulling them out of the fire; hating even the garment spotted by the flesh (Jude 22-23).  Our heartfelt desire should be to see others accept the same salvation that was freely offered to us.  We should desire that others come to know and enjoy the unmerited grace and mercies of God through the completed work of Christ Jesus.

The beautiful and simple message of the cross

HPIM0075.JPG

In extreme western Ballard County, Kentucky, overlooking the Mississippi River is the site of an old town and Army fort, Fort Jefferson.  Although the town and any remnants of the fort are long gone, on the site stands a gleaming white cross.  A small dirt road takes you from U.S. Highways 62/51 to the base of the cross that overlooks the convergence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers.  There’s no state park, no attractions, and not even a paved road – there’s just a cross.  Each time I think about the day I found this place I stand amazed at its simplicity.  There were no highway signs, no tourist information stations – there was just a cross.

I was not brought up in a Christian home and did not have the benefit of really knowing who God was.  My father was career Army and as a family, we moved from duty station to duty station about every four years.  Although both parents claimed to believe in God, there was no evidence of God in our home.  We didn’t attend church regularly, there was no Bible reading, and no prayer.  There was no such thing as family devotions, a family altar, nor even any reference to God or the Bible in any of the decorations that adorned our houses.  Looking back at my past, I clearly remember visiting family in Altus, Oklahoma and my great grandmother, Edith Mae Craft, asking me if I wanted to pray for a meal; my response to her was “I’d love to, but I don’t know how.”  I believe I was around ten or eleven at that time.  Sometime later and while I was 13, I asked my mother why we didn’t go to church like one of my neighborhood friends.  Her response was was that she wanted me to make up my own mind about God when I became an adult and did not want me to feel forced to follow what she believed.

I came to know the Lord as my personal Saviour while I was eighteen years old and while attending at a community college tied to the University of Southern Mississippi.  At the time, I was a music theory and composition major and admittedly was struggling with a lot of issues – including spirituality, sexuality, alcoholism, depression, and even my own identity. Although legally an adult at the age of eighteen, I was not prepared for college life.  Had it not been for one of my college professors, Dr. James Whitman  I might never have heard the Gospel of Jesus Christ nor accepted the Jesus Christ as my personal Saviour.  He didn’t use a bunch of fancy words, discuss church doctrines, or even point to all my shortcomings and failures.  He simply taught me how God’s love for me was demonstrated on the cross.  I will never forget the five verses Dr. Whitman used to show me God’s love and grace:

  • Romans 3:10 – As it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one:
  • Romans 3:23 – For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God;
  • Romans 6:23 – For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
  • John 3:16 – For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
  • Romans 10:10 – For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.

There’s nothing fancy or magical about the five verses he shared with me.  I will never forget that Friday evening of August 26th, 1988, with a conversation that began in the piano practice room and continued into my dormitory lobby as I struggled with the very real spiritual war that was being waged in my heart and mind.  There was no requirement that Dr. Whitman spend his own personal time trying to reach students.  He was not there as a college professor that night, but he was there as a man that was concerned with my eternal soul.  He was there to bear witness and as an answer to my broken prayers.  He was there to share the beautiful and simple message of the cross; the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus as atonement for my sins as a gift that all I needed to do was to accept it through faith.  That night, as we knelt down in prayer and I gave my heart to the Lord Jesus Christ, I felt that a tremendous weight had been lifted.  For the first time in my life I didn’t feel empty or alone.

Anyone that knows me knows that I’d like to say that from that point in my life it was all sunshine and roses, but it hasn’t been.  Unfortunately the church I began attending didn’t have a strong discipleship program and I did not remain in the Perkinston/Hattiesburg area much longer. At the end of the semester I joined the U.S. Army and spent nearly seven years serving nearly all over the globe.  Somewhere between basic training and my medical discharge in 1996  I returned back to the lifestyle I had become accustomed to while a child living at home.  It was not until 2006 that I decided to invest as much time in my personal discipleship as I did in my pursuit of higher education; if you want to see real spiritual progress in your walk with God, make Him a priority in your life.

My two year old daughter and namesake of my great grandmother, Edith is laying on the couch taking her morning nap.  Having lived through everything I have, I fully understand Joshua’s proclamation: And if it seem evil unto you to serve the LORD, choose you this day whom ye will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell: but as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD (Joshua 24:15). What my wife and I are doing with her is a matter of this decision Joshua made back then – a deliberate effort made to make God the center of our home.  She will be raised knowing that Sunday we go to church as a family, Wednesday night we gather at the church to study and pray with one another, and that God is real.  I do not want her to ever say she doesn’t know how to pray or that we didn’t want to teach her out of fear of forcing religion on her.  I want her to know the peace that God can bring into a life rather than the loneliness, desperation  and emptiness that the world offers.