Rising from the rubble in Tuscaloosa


Imagine what it would be like to have a dream where you woke one morning and your life had vanished! That dream was a very real nightmare for thousands of citizens of Tuscaloosa, Alabama and other towns all across the southern U.S. Thursday before last. On Wednesday afternoon, what was most likely an E-5 category tornado ripped through the beautiful university town of Tuscaloosa leaving a path of destruction and death in its path.

Within two or three minutes collections of pictures, sports trophies, diplomas, art, and treasured home furnishings that took many years to gather were gone. Gone too is the family home, the cars, clothing, neighbors and neighborhood. Most people who escaped death were left only with the clothing they were wearing after the storm with no name had completed its destruction.

People pick through the rubble hoping to find something…anything they can cling to of their lives before the storm. What is next for these folks?

Maybe a few articles of clothing can be found here until we can…..??

Wednesday morning the Central Church of Christ was one of the prettiest structures in the whole area. Beauty is fleeting! This beautiful place of worship and fellowship now awaits bulldozers and wrecking crews. But, they will rebuild on this site and keep loving God and their neighbors.

Volunteerism is thriving. Mike Baumgartner’s Disaster Assistance, along with Don and Rosemary Hudson, and many other helpers, are serving thousands of meals to both residents and workers each day. The positive attitudes of the volunteers and the folks who have lost almost everything is wonderful.

For many, many families the music has stopped…, but not forever! They, with the love and help of their faith community, volunteers from all across the country, and the trademark resilience that marks the American people, will go on. New homes will soon stand proudly where now there is only trash.

The beauty of those now wrecked Tuscaloosa neighborhoods has not died…it has only paused for a time, and life will resume. But not for all. Many residents died in the storm and I am praying for their families and friends. May their broken hearts be comforted and one day healed.

If you want to help, what is most needed at this moment is cash. It will be days or weeks before those losses that were insured can be reconciled. People need food, clothing, temporary housing expenses, cars, and well…just look around your house and try to imagine it being all gone.

There are many great organizations who are helping and will help. I can recommend Whites Ferry Road Relief. Since the late 70’s WFR Relief has responded to natural catastrophes around the globe and as God provides will help the people in Tuscaloosa too. You can donate online at  http://www.wfrchurch.org/relief/. Or you can mail a check to: Relief3201 N. 7th Street, West Monroe, La 71291. 

For now there is no mail box at the church so gifts may be sent to the above address or to the University Church of Christ, 1200 Julia Tutwiler Drive, Tuscaloosa, AL 35404-2934, and designated “Central Church”. Every gift will be used to help the people of the Central Church and then allow them to better help their neighbors.

Hope is in your mouth and help is in your hand.

Royce Ogle

You are who God says you are


And now from the archives, a post first published in 2006.

“And such were some of you”

Last evening in a small group one of the young men said in part, “Well, I am just a sinner too.” The context was how we as believers should interact with those who are not. I wanted to correct him, but quickly decided to do so would be unwise in that context while having a discussion about personal evangelism.

A common misconception is that those of us who are “born from above” are “just sinners too”. We are not sinners but saints. Of course we all sin. As long as we inhabit flesh we will fall short of God’s standard for righteousness. This sad fact is precisely why Jesus came.

And such were some of you.”

In 1 Corinthians 6:11 Paul set the record straight. In the previous verses Paul discussed sinners such as fornicators, adulterers, thieves, drunkards, covetous, homosexuals, etc. and then said, “And such were some of you“.

Paul and others are careful to speak of those ugly lifestyles in the past tense when referring to believers. Interestingly, in the following verses he warns with these words.

Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ? Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them members of a harlot? Certainly not! 16 Or do you not know that he who is joined to a harlot is one body with her? For “the two,” He says, “shall become one flesh.”17 But he who is joined to the Lord is one spirit with Him.18 Flee sexual immorality. Every sin that a man does is outside the body, but he who commits sexual immorality sins against his own body. 19 Or do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own? 20 For you were bought at a price; therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.

These truths are clear. We used to be sinners (“And such were some of you”). We have been changed by Christ (But you were washed, but you were sanctified, but you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God.”) Even though we have beenchanged, we can still fall into sin. (“Flee sexual immorality”)

We have been given a new identity. We are not “sinners”, but are now “saints”. Over 50 times in the New Testament, by several different writers, all inspired by the Holy Spirit of God, we who are saved are called “Saints”. I was a sinner, by God’s grace I am now a Saint.
Grace to you,
Royce Ogle

Prayer suggestions


Have you ever had someone ask you, “Please put her on your prayer list”, or “Please pray for xxxx who is having surgery on Tuesday”. Or, have you said to someone, “I’ll be praying for you”, or when asked if you will pray have you said, “I will”….and then not do it? I have more than a few times. It is done almost always with the best intentions, but, if we tell someone we will do something we should do it.

Here are some suggestions about intercessory prayers that have been helpful to me and might be to you.

PRAY NOW

Whenever possible pray when asked or as quickly as you can. I learned this valuable from Dr. John R Rice in the early 1970’s. I had heard him speak in a large auditorium in Atlanta and I was one in a long line to speak to him after his message. I had a prayer concern that at the time was very important to me. I quickly in a sentence or two told him my concern. He surprised my by laying his hand on my shoulder and praying a simple, to the point prayer, in two or three sentences, wished me well and was on to the next person in line to greet him. Again and again since that day I have prayed with people who have asked me when they asked, in a tire store, a hospital hallway, or before Sunday school, it is the easiest way to not forget.

And, if I can’t pray with the person right on the spot I will often breathe a prayer for their concern once I walk away. Then, if God brings it to my heart and mind later I might pray again, and again. This practice has helped me to avoid saying I will and then failing to do so.

JUST ASK

I think most of us would have much more time for prayer and for other things if we would just ask what we want and leave off much of the extras. Saying in a prayer “Lord you know…” and then talking for 10 minutes telling God what He already knows is not very helpful in most cases. I really doubt that God wants a few minutes added to the beginning and ending of our requests where we present a brief presentation of the theology of God done in King James language. God knows us! We don’t need to bring him up to date on any current or future event.

Bible prayers were always asking. Thanksgiving goes will with prayer, and we should always be thankful, but being thankful isn’t prayer. It is an addition to prayer. And so it is with everything we tell God. It is good and right to tell God how we adore him and love him and appreciate what He has done for us. But when it’s time to pray for a particular need, just go to him and ask. He again, and again, and again invites us to do just that.

PRAY ONLY TO GOD

This might seem like a foolish thing to say but it really isn’t. Pray only to God and not to the person who is listening. I have done it and you have done it. For sure we are blessed and encouraged and helped and edified listening to others pray. However, our prayers should be directed only to God.

A proud grandfather asked his small grand daughter to pray before the evening meal. She mumbled something and said Amen and started after the mashed potatoes. He said to her “I couldn’t hear a thing you said!” She replied “I wasn’t talking to you.” Lesson learned! She was taking to God not the people at the table.

Far too often our public prayers are mostly to those listening and not to God. I suggest that our public prayers should be short and pointed, asking for something specific and expecting an answer. Prayers that take 2 to 5 minutes and ask for little and expect nothing are not useful and I think probably not very pleasing to God.

Above everything else PRAY! Don’t miss out on the some of the unmatched blessings of knowing that God has heard and answered your specific prayers. God is delighted to to things for his children. He will always do what is good and best for his own. He has promised to care for our necessities but oh how he want us to come daily in prayer to ask for “daily bread”. He doesn’t want us to ask for a week but to come daily to him with our needs.

I can never be thankful enough for my dear mother, who is now with the Lord, who taught me by example how to pray and get answers from God. I only heard he pray in public a few times before a meal. But she delighted to tell me and others of how kind God was to give her the smallest requests in answer to prayer. I never have known anyone personally other than mom’s brother Bill Wheeler who had such a rich prayer life with regular answers routine.

Just ask and see that the Lord is faithful.

Royce

The resurrection of Jesus, Why?


The reason Jesus came to earth, born of woman but with no human father was because you needed the cycle of sin and death to be broken.

The reason Jesus lived a perfect holy life is because when you stand before God you will need a perfect holy life to be acceptable.

The reason Jesus died the death of a sinner and suffered the wrath of God against sin was because He didn’t want you to have to.

The reason Jesus rose from death to immortality was because you would need to be immortal to be able to enjoy life with God in eternity.

The death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ our Lord was the Creator God loving you.

For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve. Then he appeared to more than five hundred brothers at one time, most of whom are still alive, though some have fallen asleep. Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles.
1 Corinthians 15:3-7

How will we respond to God’s gracious gift of love? I recommend you take it.

grace driven,
Royce