Monthly Archives: January 2014

Sara Titus: Profile

Sara Titus: Profile

 

Connect

Email:

mstitus@gmail.com

Facebook:

facebook.com/sara.titus.54


Sara Titus

My Story

I was an MK (Missionary Kid), TCK, whatever you want to call it, myself. My parents were missionaries in Colombia, South America. So, not only was my home Christian, but it also had a strong missionary emphasis. I remember at age 12 deciding that I would one day be a missionary myself.

God got a hold of my heart in college, and woke me up to the lost-ness of people. He gave me a real love for people who do not know Him. I realized that I didn’t really know how to talk to non-Christians, how to really listen to them, love them, and be transparent with them. InterVarsity Christian Fellowhship played a big role in all that.

I also met Matthew at college (WIU) and we got married the year that we graduated. We wanted to work for a couple of years (I taught Spanish at Monmouth College, he worked for Enterprise Rent-a-Car), and then we applied with TEAM. We told them we’d go anywhere for six months to a year.

 

We ended up in the Czech (ask us about that story sometime!) for a year. During that year, we felt God confirming that He wanted us to return to the Czech as long-term missionaries. That was back in 2004. Then we spent 8 years back in the States doing more schooling, raising support, having 4 kids, etc. (Why did it take us 8 years? Another story we’d love to tell you sometime.)

Because of God’s faithfulness, we are now back in the Czech, and will spend the next two years concentrating on learning Czech and seeking where God wants us to serve after our time of language.

 


Family:

Married to Matthew Titus. Our awesome kids are Izabela, Samuel, Lucie, and Evangeline.

Ministry Focus:

First, two years of language and culture learning. Then, our goal is to partner with Czech believers to form reproducing communities of people who follow Jesus as King.

The road of goodness …

If you have never used the New Century Version to read through the Bible, you may want to give it a try. An excellent reading level and more literal than you would think. A pleasant surprise.

FIVE STARS *****

Here is a sample:

Proverbs 4:23–27 (NCV)
Be careful what you think, because your thoughts run your life. 24 Don’t use your mouth to tell lies; don’t ever say things that are not true. 25 Keep your eyes focused on what is right, and look straight ahead to what is good. 26 Be careful what you do, and always do what is right. 27 Don’t turn off the road of goodness; keep away from evil paths.

God’s word. Amen and amen!

Preaching Schedule for January 26, 2014 through April 20, 2014

Hello Everyone,

UPDATE: Sorry for the wrong dates. I have not yet recovered from “the big one” of 2014 I guess. I think I have it right now.

I am revising my preaching schedule again due to the weather and my desire to speak on heaven or hell for one more Sunday as we prepare ourselves to “number our days” for this new year – 2014.

Dave

A Study in the Book of Ezra / January 26, 2014 – April 6, 2014

Palm Sunday and Resurrection Day April 13 – 20, 2014

Lessons in the Sovereignty of God: Building with God’s Blessing in a Pagan Land!

 

 

DATE TITLE TEXT
January 26, 2014 Cyrus Bows to the Sovereign Command of God Ezra 1:1–11
February 2, 2014 The People Answer the Sovereign Call of God Ezra 2:1–70
February 9, 2014 Rising Above Our Fears in Worship and Service Ezra 3:1–12
February 16, 2014 The Purity and Integrity of Building Alone Ezra 4:1-24
February 23, 2014 The Eye of God Was Upon Them Ezra 5:1–17
March 2, 2014 The King Decrees: “Let the House Be Rebuilt” Ezra 6:1–22
March 9 [Time Change] Preparing Our Hearts to Seek the Word of God Ezra 7:1–28
March 16, 2014 By the Good Hand of Our God Upon Us Ezra 8:1–20
March 23, 2014 Humbling Ourselves Under the Hand of God Ezra 8:21–36
March 30, 2014 The Holy Seed and Trembling at the Words of God Ezra 9:1–15
April 6, 2014 The Message of Shechaniah: Yet There Is Hope! Ezra 10:1–44
April 13, 2014 Palm Sunday TBA
April 20, 2014 Resurrection Day TBA
     

 

 

 

HANDOUTS 3 & 4 for this week and next …

Okay. I am finally getting caught up after our trip to Indiana in which we were snowbound for a couple days.

Is hell real? Is hell forever? Have you ever noticed that people typically do not question the reality of heaven? Why do we do this?

Hell is so hard to understand and accept.

But we have God’s word. So we study and listen and believe.

  • Check out the article in a previous post by Russell Moore. Excellent!

Can I understand how a loving God could send people away for judgment in this way? Not really. I know the theology but it seems so harsh.

  • (Romans 11:33 ESV) Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways!

However, I know God. I trust God. I believe his word. We cannot disbelieve because we do not understand. We cannot question the choices of a God whose wisdom is unsearchable and whose ways are past finding out.

So God says it, and I believe it.

  • There is no doctrine which I would more willingly remove from Christianity than this, if it lay in my power. But it has the full support of Scripture and, specially, of our Lord’s own words; it has always been held by Christendom; and it has the support of reason (C.S. Lewis).

Here are two more handouts. I will be preaching from HANDOUTS 1-4 Sunday January 12 and Sunday January 19 Lord willing.

Then we begin our Ezra study.

Message Title: Dust to Dust to Heaven or Hell!

Message Text: Psalm 90:1-12, Revelation 20:11 – 21:8 and others

Why Is Hell Forever? by Russell Moore

Why Is Hell Forever?
By Russell Moore
— MONDAY, MARCH 21ST, 2011 —

http://www.russellmoore.com/2011/03/21/why-is-hell-forever/

For the past several weeks, evangelical Christians have spent a lot of time talking about Rob Bell’s new book, Love Wins, in which he seeks to redefine the Christian doctrine of hell. As others have noted, Bell’s argument is not new at all. But Bell’s central point is always relevant. One of his questions weighs particularly heavily. Why, if there is a hell, is it forever?

The idea of eternal hell weighs heavily on the heart, as we think of those we know and love apart from Christ. Sometimes a devilish desire to condemn (“You will not surely die”) is behind a denial of future judgment, but sometimes the human motive is just the unbearable gravity of it all. Why, Bell and others before him ask, would God sentence an everlasting punishment for crimes committed in what God himself describes as a life so quick that it’s like a vapor of mist?

First of all, the Scripture is quite clear that hell is indeed everlasting. Jesus leaves the psychic burden intact. Yes, Scripture speaks of hell as “death” and “destruction” but defines these in terms of a place where “they will be tormented day and night forever and ever” (Rev. 20:10). Why must this go on forever? There are at least two reasons.

First, the revolt against God is more serious than we think it is. An insurrection against an infinitely worthy Creator is an infinitely heinous offense. We know something of this intuitively. This is why, in our human sentences of justice, we sentence a man to one punishment for threatening to kill his co-worker and another man to a much more severe punishment for threatening to kill the nation’s president.

Second, and more important, is the nature of the punishment itself. The sinner in hell does not become morally neutral upon his sentence to hell. We must not imagine the damned displaying gospel repentance and longing for the presence of Christ. They do indeed, as in the story of the rich man and Lazarus, seek for an escape from punishment, but they are not new creations. They do not in hell love the Lord their God with heart, mind, soul, and strength.

Instead, in hell, one is now handed over to the full display of his nature apart from grace. And this nature is seen to be satanic (Jn. 8:44). The condemnation continues forever and ever, because the sin does too. Hell is the final “handing over” (Rom. 1) of the rebel to who he wants to be, and it’s awful.

Attempts to navigate around the truth of hell as everlasting punishment show us something of our complicity in the Edenic sin: the substitution of human wisdom and human justice and, yes, human notions of love for the authority of God.

Yes, hell is horrifying. God deems it so. Our response to such horror should not be denial, but the fervent evangelism of the nations. Knowing the terror of it all, we should plead with people, as though Christ himself were pleading through us, “Be reconciled to God” (2 Cor. 5:20).

  • As C.S. Lewis writes, “In the long run the answer to all those who object to the doctrine of hell is itself a question: ‘What are you asking God to do?’ To wipe out their past sins and, at all costs, to give them a fresh start, smoothing every difficulty and offering every miraculous help? But he has done so, on Calvary. To forgive them? They will not be forgiven. To leave them alone? Alas, I am afraid that is what he does.”

Hell ought to drive us not to find misplaced hopes for the lost, but to the only hope for us, and for the whole world, the gospel of Jesus Christ. The Christian gospel maintains that “the day of salvation” is now (2 Cor. 6:2), during this lifetime’s temporary suspension of doom. After this, the grace of God is not extended, only his justice, and that with severity.

Jesus does indeed triumph over all things (Love wins!), making peace through the blood of his cross (Col. 1:20). But this peace doesn’t mean the redemption of each individual. Instead, Jesus triumphs over his enemies, as they are defeated beneath the feet of his kingship. Yes, every tongue confessed Jesus as lord, even Satan himself (Phil. 2:9-11). This does not mean, as Jesus himself teaches, that every tongue cries out to him for salvation. Instead there is a universal recognition that Jesus has triumphed over every rival to his throne. The redeemed will love this truth; the impenitent will lament it.

Until then, we preach, we plead, we beg, we warn. Hell is awful, and unending, and completely avoidable.

Russell D. Moore is …

President of the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, the Southern Baptist Convention’s official entity assigned to address social, moral, and ethical concerns.

Dr. Moore earned a B.S. in history and political science from the University of Southern Mississippi. He also received the M.Div. in biblical studies from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, and the Ph.D. in systematic theology from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.

http://www.russellmoore.com/about/

 

Recent missionary correspondence – PDFs

Hello Everyone,

Here are recent newsletters from Don and Bev Roth, Good News Radio and IDES for those who are interested. I am finally beginning to get things organized and am going to try to make this a habit. I would recommend subscribing to the blog and you will have very attractive notices delivered to your email “doorstep.”

Dave

Information on English Standard Version (ESV Bible)

English Standard Version (ESV Bible)

Publisher Crossway Bibles, a division of Good News Publishers.
http://www.biblegateway.com/versions/English-Standard-Version-ESV-Bible/

  • The English Standard Version (ESV) stands in the classic mainstream of English Bible translations over the past half-millennium. The fountainhead of that stream was William Tyndale’s New Testament of 1526; marking its course were the King James Version of 1611 (KJV), the English Revised Version of 1885 (RV), the American Standard Version of 1901 (ASV), and the Revised Standard Version of 1952 and 1971 (RSV). In that stream, faithfulness to the text and vigorous pursuit of accuracy were combined with simplicity, beauty, and dignity of expression. Our goal has been to carry forward this legacy for a new century.
  • To this end each word and phrase in the ESV has been carefully weighed against the original Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, to ensure the fullest accuracy and clarity and to avoid under-translating or overlooking any nuance of the original text. The words and phrases themselves grow out of the Tyndale-King James legacy, and most recently out of the RSV, with the 1971 RSV text providing the starting point for our work. Archaic language has been brought to current usage and significant corrections have been made in the translation of key texts. But throughout, our goal has been to retain the depth of meaning and enduring language that have made their indelible mark on the English-speaking world and have defined the life and doctrine of the church over the last four centuries.
  • The ESV is an “essentially literal” translation that seeks as far as possible to capture the precise wording of the original text and the personal style of each Bible writer. It seeks to be transparent to the original text, letting the reader see as directly as possible the structure and meaning of the original. More about the ESV translation philosophy…

 

The Lord is in his holy temple … How can you say “flee like a bird?” …

http://bible.com/59/PSA11.1.ESV

In the Lord I take refuge; how can you say to my soul, “Flee like a bird to your mountain, for behold, the wicked bend the bow; they have fitted their arrow to the string to shoot in the dark at the upright in heart; if the foundations are destroyed, what can the righteous do?”

The Lord is in his holy temple; the Lord ’s throne is in heaven; his eyes see, his eyelids test the children of man. The Lord tests the righteous, but his soul hates the wicked and the one who loves violence. Let him rain coals on the wicked; fire and sulfur and a scorching wind shall be the portion of their cup. For the Lord is righteous; he loves righteous deeds; the upright shall behold his face.

Bible.com/app