Tuesday, December 2, 2014

A SPECK IN THE UNIVERSE, BUT YOU'RE LOVED!


                                          By Ada Brownell
      Recently a Christian astronomer spoke at our church. He has a giant telescope and goes out on his driveway in the middle of the night and takes pictures of what he sees. His photos of the universe have been published by some of the most prestigious scientific journals in the world, including those of the National Space and Aeronautics Administration.
      Dr. Richard Hammer is a chemistry professor at Evangel University, and his work with astronomy began as a hobby. Now he’s teaching astronomy as well.
      After showing slide after slide of the sun, moon, stars and planets spreading endlessly across the sky, he showed us several awesome photos and pointed out how earth is only a little speck humankind can see through the windshield of our technology.
      He reminded us David asked, “What is man that God is mindful of him?” (Psalm 8:4).
      A whole universe, with galaxy after galaxy, and God chose this wad of  whirling dirt moving at just the right speed with the correct amount of gravity and oxygen as the place to form a man and woman—His creation. We all know those humans rebelled and didn’t believe if they ate of the forbidden tree that they would die. After all, the serpent laughed and said, “You won’t die.” But not long afterward, they stood beside a dead son and then they died.
       The last slide I remember Hammer showing was a photo of bloody hands, representing the nail-scarred hands of Jesus coming to deliver humankind from sin and death, and I couldn’t help but remember we are only a speck in the universe.
      That night after we returned home I read 1 John 3: 1-3:  “How great is the love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are! The reason the world does not know us is that it did not know him. Dear friends, now we are the children of God and what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when he appears we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is. Everyone who has this hope in him purifies himself, just as he is pure.”
      John says it all.
      © March 30, 2011


Monday, November 10, 2014

AN IMPORTANT PLACE FOR YOUR NAME


Your name appears many places. It first was written on your birth certificate and the wristband you wore in the hospital after you were born.
The government has archives on you, beginning with your Social Security number. The driver’s license bureau keeps records under your name. Your name appears on loans, titles, and deeds.
Your name may be in the news if you receive awards or do notable things. Your name will be listed with marriage licenses and your engagement and wedding announcements may be in the newspaper—but hopefully it won’t be in the divorce column.  If you are in a serious accident or arrested after age eighteen, your name might be in the news.
If you become a screen star, a politician, an inventor, a hero, extremely wealthy, a philanthropist,  a successful businessman, a writer, or just someone who voices an opinion in the right place, people will see your name. Your name could become a household word.
Mostly, however, our names are spoken more than written. Sometimes your name just runs around in people’s heads.
Unless the Lord Jesus Christ returns first or you are lost at sea or buried in an unknown tomb, someday your name probably will appear on a tombstone or an urn containing your ashes.
For the most part, your name reflects who you are and what you do. Today is the day to prepare for the future.
That brings us to an important book where you want your name to appear.
Your success at achieving the ultimate life begins with your name in the Book of Life, the “Who’s Who” of who is going to live forever in heaven.
How do you get in?
Different from some other Who’s Who books, you aren’t required to pay a fee or buy that edition. An entry is free of cost to you—but a huge amount already has been paid in blood by Jesus Christ for your name to be included. That’s called redemption because we were born into sin and the penalty for sin is eternal death.
Jesus told his disciples to rejoice that their names were written in heaven.[1] The last book of the Bible, Revelation, has multiple references to the “Book of Life.”[2]
 Revelation chapter 20 describes the vision the Apostle John saw of the Great White Throne Judgment: “I saw the dead, both great and small, standing before God’s throne. And the books were opened, including the Book of Life. And the dead were judged according to things written in the books.”
 In Revelation 21, we’re given a description of heaven that “has no need of sun or moon, for the glory of God illuminates the city. There will be no night. Nothing evil will be allowed to enter, and the only humans who will be there are those whose names are written in the Lamb’s (Jesus's) Book of Life.”
It all begins when we make a decision to believe, repent of our sins and accept the redemption, the abundant life, Jesus promised.
That’s when your name is entered in the Book, and becomes special.

--Excerpt from Ada Brownell's motivational Bible study, Imagine the Future You, available on Amazon.  ©Ada Brownell 2014



[1] Luke 10:20
[2] Rev. 3:5; Rev. 20:12; Rev. 21:27


IMAGINE THE FUTURE YOU
By Ada Brownell

This motivational Bible study will help you discover evidence for faith; how to look and be your best; who can help; interesting information about dating, love and marriage; choosing a career; how to deposit good things into your brain you can spend; and how to avoid hazards that jeopardize a successful life on earth and for eternity, all mingled with true stories that can make you smile.

Thursday, October 16, 2014

GOD WITH US

      By Ada Brownell

“I’m sleeping in the kitchen!”
Sure enough, we brought in a full-size mattress from the shed and our 5-year-old grandson, Justin, awakened on the kitchen floor, his blond hair tossled, eyes wide in amazement.
His parents arrived at our house late at night and Justin had been asleep. Now he looked into the living room at the folded out hide-a-bed and lumps of people still snoozing in sleeping bags on our mobile home floor. People still snored in our two bedrooms, too. But Justin and Granny wanted to be up and at it.
I hugged my grandson, and joy filled my heart. Like birds going south for the winter, all of our family came home for Christmas.
All of us except Carolyn. This would be our first Christmas without her.  Losing her sucked so many things from our family. Her presence always added love, fun, joy and laughter.
Her step-son, Rob, and husband, Michael, lounged on the hide-a-bed, coming awake now. They flew in from California to where we lived in Colorado.
Gary and Janice drove from New Mexico. Jaron, Gwen and Jeanette came from Missouri and Oklahoma where they attended college.
Eyes popped open and soon the mobile home, our temporary residence while we built a new two-story house, rocked with conversation and activity. Extra beds disappeared, coffee and breakfast brought new life.
The smell of Christmas turkey soon filled the place.
The busy day ended with all of us in the living room, most on the floor, some with Bibles, discussing the past year.
Going on with life hadn’t been easy after Carolyn’s death. I didn’t have much time to grieve because I needed to go back to work as soon as I arrived home from San Jose after the funeral.
  When I’d made the plane reservations weeks before, I’d hoped to be with Carolyn while she recuperated from chemotherapy. Since it was December, I’d already used my vacation, but a kind boss allowed me to borrow vacation from the next year.
I didn’t tell the family about the hard times as we sat there nearly 12 months later, enjoying one another. Yet, I couldn’t forget the first day back at work when I met a friend and she asked me about Carolyn.
“She’s so talented,” she said. “Where does she live?  Is she married?”
Trying to keep control, I told her Carolyn passed away. I didn’t fall apart until on my way to my car. My breath came in gasps and the agony of my sorrow burst from me.
I didn’t share with our children that Christmas night how only a month or so previously my husband kept playing a recording of Sandi Patti singing the song, “It is Well with My Soul.” Carolyn shared with me how much that song meant to her after she had the awful diagnosis.  my husband played the recording, I started crying. I began weeping on Friday night and tears ran down my face all Saturday and continued on Sunday.
We were on our way to church and I told my husband, “I can’t go in there.  I can’t stop crying.”
I cried most of the day on Sunday.  It had been nearly a year, and I couldn’t stop weeping.
Now as we sat dry eyed on the floor with family, Jaron told about God’s comfort. He never mentioned that he lost the last year of his four-year academic scholarship because when he studied, he’d find himself staring off in space thinking about Carolyn. He didn’t even realize he’d sat there an hour or two, supposed to be hitting the books. He missed the required grade-point average by just a few points, but it was too much. The scholarship was yanked.
All of us were affected by God’s faithfulness in our grief, but Carolyn’s stepson, Rob and our youngest daughter, Jeanette, had the greatest testimonies. God drew them close to Himself—and did the work almost simultaneously in them at the time of Carolyn’s death.
As we sat together, Carolyn’s husband, Michael, shared how God brought a number of people in California to salvation through Carolyn life, testimony and death.
 Beyond that, Michael now was the youth pastor at his church, and the Lord walked beside him in his life as a single parent.
“God is really working in the lives of youth in our church,” Michael shared, his eyes sparkling with enthusiasm.
One by one, we talked about God’s faithfulness, even in our hours of sorrow.
We read the Christmas story.
“Away in a Manger,” we sang for our little Justin and his sister, Melissa. I think “Jingle Bells” slipped in somewhere.
Most of us shared a scripture, a tradition we started the night Carolyn died when Rob and Jeanette read us encouraging verses from God’s word from a list provided by my brother.
That year I began underlining every scripture in the New Testament about eternal life. I saw death is the reason for Christmas. God warned Adam and Eve if they disobeyed and ate from the forbidden tree, they would die.
“You won’t die,” Satan, who took on the body of a snake, said.
Soon Adam and Eve experienced the agony of losing a child when Cain killed Abel. But right after sin entered the world, God promised a Redeemer who will cleanse us and give us immortality—if we by faith accepted His Gift..
One scripture that means a lot to me is Matthew 4:11 where Matthew told how Jesus fulfilled the prophecy written centuries before Jesus came, “The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of the shadow of death a light has dawned….For unto us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the government will be on his shoulders.  And he will be called Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God Everlasting Father, Prince of peace” (Isaiah 9:2, 6).
Another special passage is Matthew 1:22-24: “The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel” (which means “God with us”).
            God with us. That is what one by one we told one another in our family as we sat together that Christmas night. God---the creator of the universe always stuck near us.
I don’t know if our little Justin, now a man and a college graduate, remembers that night, but one day when he was still a little boy he noticed a verse written on brass, which decorated a table.
“I memorized that verse,” he said, and quoted John 14:1-3KJ, “Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me.  In my Father’s house are many mansions…I go to prepare and place for you.  And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am there ye may be also.”
We hadn’t received a miracle of healing we desired with Carolyn, but we experienced God never leaving or forsaking us, giving us peace when the storm of grief struck, challenging us to live closer to Him.
“Joy to the World,” says it all. Joy, joy, joy because there is hope beyond death. God gave a Gift I’d rather have than diamonds, gold, a beautiful home, or anything money can buy. I’d rather have God with us than anything.
©Ada Brownell











Tuesday, September 2, 2014

HOW LONG IS FOREVER?

                                       

              HOW LONG IS FOREVER?

                                                      By Ada Brownell


Grand Mesa near Grand Junction, Colo., is the largest flat-top mountain in the world. The mountain has 300 lakes that anglers claim are “bottomless.” In Carlsbad Caverns, early spelunkers named one yawning opening as “The Bottomless Pit.”
Yet, we know those lakes and the pit end somewhere. Someone discovered the reason the abyss in the cavern seems to have no bottom is because soft sand covers its floor. Sand prevents sound when a stone dropped.

Although people imagine pits and lakes that go on forever, the human mind can’t comprehend no beginning and no end. I used to try to figure it out as a child and it made me dizzy.

At the end of the Lord’s prayer we say, “For thine is the kingdom, the power and the glory—forever.”

How long is forever? No man has wrapped his brain around it, but we know from God's Word He is eternal. The great “I am.” The self-existent One. The One who was, and is, and is to come. Someone with no beginning and no end. He’s always been, He is, and He will exist forever.

But humankind is limited. We all have a beginning, and life does end. But Jesus promised whoever lives and believes in Him will never die” (John 11:26).

What hope that gives! Back when Adam and Eve sinned in the garden and they discovered Satan lied, telling them, “You won’t die if you eat the forbidden fruit,” they realized their future was ruined.

Afterward, although they would die, God promised a Redeemer who would reverse Satan’s scheme. Through God’s only Son, eternal life was restored for those who accept redemption.

 Although often it brings joy, “forever” can be a troubling word. Like Adam and Eve, sometimes our choices mean we are changed forever. Suicide is a forever decision; it can’t be reversed. Rejecting Jesus can be a forever decision because “It is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment” (Hebrews 9:26-28).

The Book of Revelation is full of “forever” passages, most reasons to rejoice. “There will be no night there—no need for lamps or sun—for the Lord God will shine on them. And they will reign forever and ever” (Revelation 22:5NLT).

  “And every creature which is in heaven and on the earth and under the earth and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them, I heard saying: “Blessing and honor and glory and power be to Him who sits on the throne, And to the Lamb, forever and ever!” (Revelation 5: 13NKJ).

”Then the devil, who had deceived them, was thrown into the fiery lake of burning sulfur, joining the beast and the false prophet. There they will be tormented day and night forever and ever” (Rev. 20:10NLT).

            “
And the seventh angel sounded; and there were great voices in heaven, saying, The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign forever and ever” (Revelation 11:15KJ).

If we know Jesus and accept God’s love, even though we die, we will live forever, too. This is the theme of my book, Swallowed by LIFE: “While we live in these earthly bodies, we groan and sigh, but it’s not that we want to die and get rid of these bodies that clothe us. Rather, we want to put on our new bodies so that these dying bodies will be swallowed up by life” 2 Corinthians 5:4NLT).
©Ada Brownell 2012
Ada’s Blog: http://inkfromanearthenvessel.blogspot.com








Sunday, August 10, 2014

FANNY CROSBY AND ME





2011

Dear Reader,

This year is quickly being swept away by the winds of time and I find myself thankful, challenged and awed at the Lord’s work in my life. How about you?
I received notification today that the physical proof copy of Swallowed by LIFE: Mysteries of Death, Resurrection and the Eternal, will be in my hands in a few days. I have the same fears many writers have with the birth of a book.  Will it be received well? Will it help anyone?
Writers work in a challenging ministry. Everything we write is unique. Just because we wrote one good story, will we be able to write another?
Last year at this time, we attended an old-fashioned hymn sing at Maranatha Chapel in Springfield, MO, where Fanny Crosby songs were featured and little tidbits about her life were shared.  What a great time we had worshiping and rejoicing as the congregation, a choir, duets, trios and quartets sang words written by a woman blind since 6 weeks of age.
Amazing that they were written in the 1800s, and they still strike a responsive chord in our hearts: Blessed Assurance, I Will Praise Him, Jesus is Passing this Way, Near the Cross.
Fanny wrote 8,000 hymns and it is estimated 100 million copies of her songs were printed. She used 200 pseudonyms because publishers hesitated to publish a large number of her hymns in the same book.
Busy like we are, she married, but lost her only child in infancy. A mission became one of her ministries. She played the organ in churches, taught private music lessons, wrote two autobiographies and 1,000 secular poems and a number of secular songs.
       Often copyright was assigned to the music composer instead of the lyricist, some say because of exploitation of female writers, but she kept writing and pursued her goal of winning a million to Christ through her hymns.
I remind myself—she was blind!
I’ve thought on the following scripture recently:  “Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your might; for there is no work or device or knowledge or wisdom in the grave where you are going” (Ecclesiastes 9:10).
If you’d like a copy of Swallowed by Life, here’s my Amazon author page:
Amazon Ada Brownell author page: http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B001KJ2C06

In His Love,
Ada Brownell


© Ada Brownell 2011
 



Friday, July 25, 2014

THE INVISIBLE

THE INVISIBLE
By Ada Brownell

Amazing unseen things happened at my conception. Then after birth, unnoticed activity took place in my brain as I grew. I learned to speak English. I decided I didn’t like hominy ‘cause they used lye to make it. Fear of flogging roosters stirred in my skinny breast, and panic disturbed my sleep because a sibling told me Indians used to roam on our farm.
I wasn’t much more than a toddler when I learned Jesus loved me and had a wonderful plan for my life. From a large impoverished family and a freckled-faced redhead, when I started school, classmates often teased me. Yet, I smiled inside where they couldn’t see because I had a secret. Jesus loved me!
I’d never seen Jesus, but when I gave my heart to Him, I knew He is real. The invisible has been much of my reality. I saw people in our family healed, and observed other answers to prayer and miracles. I breathed invisible air, felt invisible wind, planted seeds with invisible life, and ate eggs with God’s invisible design in them to make a live chicken, if fertilized. I could go on and on.
God is teaching me more about the invisible. No, not about the evil out there, but the wondrous power of God available.
In Hebrews 11, the Faith Chapter, we’re told, “Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see... By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible” (1,3).
In awe, I think about the power that created the universe.  Power more amazing than man can imagine, and yet I can have a portion of that power. Isaiah wrote, “He gives power to the weak, and to those who have no might he increases strength.” “God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and a sound mind” (2 Timothy 1:7).
Acts 1:8 says, “You shall receive power after the Holy Ghost comes upon you and you shall be my witnesses.”
The same power that created the universe will abide in me to accomplish things not seen, such as love and redemption. Invisible, but amazing.
©Copyright Ada Brownell April 2014











Tuesday, July 1, 2014

HOW WAS LIFE CREATED?



By Ada Brownell

Excerpt from Swallowed by Life:

Mysteries of Death, Resurrection and the Eternal






Josh McDowell, author of Evidence that Demands a Verdict, points out the lives of the apostles were transformed after the Resurrection. According to scripture and biblical historians, every one of the apostles, with the exception of John, who died as a prisoner on Patmos, and Judas, who killed himself, gave their lives because they preached that Jesus rose from the dead. McDowell adds people often become martyrs because of their beliefs—but no one would give his life for something he knew was a lie. If Jesus had not risen from the dead, the disciples would have known it.
          The disciples knew the earthly body of Jesus was dead and His body was changed and came out of the tomb alive forevermore. Despite being thrown in prison and threats against their lives if they didn’t quit telling everyone about the Jesus rising from the dead, the disciples kept on preaching the truth so others could be saved from eternal death and live. They believed, spread the news, and died for it.
Although I knew all these things, no one was going to show me God, prove I will live forever, or take me on an advance tour of heaven. The requirement for salvation is faith, and if we could prove heaven exists, there would be no reason for faith.
Now, did I have this faith?
          I knew any question about the hereafter is settled by faith. The atheist who believes there is nothing after death has only his faith—no proof. Without faith there is no answer to how we got here, why we are here, or where we are going.
          I was already convinced the person who believes in reincarnation has only his faith. My study led me to conclude that men devise reincarnation to give them hope beyond the grave. People who reject Christianity often take to believing in reincarnation, which is the belief in a chain of rebirths in which each soul, through virtuous living, can rise to a higher state. People who subscribe to this belief, based in Hinduism, believe they keep coming back until they reach nirvana, the final stage, where there is emancipation for the soul. The soul then is taken from the chain of rebirths into nothingness. I couldn’t understand why anyone would want to believe that because when you reach the highest plane you cease to exist. Why would I want to disappear for all eternity? And why would it happen then?
          I discovered many people are attracted to belief in reincarnation because in Hinduism there is no sin against a holy God. Even though Hindus are encouraged to be peacemakers, there is no reason to repent of your sins. Reincarnation doesn’t require you to change your sinful way of living if you don’t want to.
          My study of the Bible showed me that right after Adam and Eve sinned in the garden, God promised a Redeemer. At the moment of Adam and Eve’s sin, the exact opposite of resurrection took place. Before they ate of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, they were not mortals. One of the lies Satan told Eve was she would not die as God warned.
          Yet after they sinned, suddenly the man and woman became naked, flesh-and-blood creatures who suffered from heat and cold, fatigue, pain, sickness, and, eventually, death.
In the pristine environment of the newly created earth, Adam lived to be nine hundred thirty years old. But it wasn’t long after their sin that the first couple understood God’s warning about what sin would do. Their guts ripped with anguish when death invaded their family and became an enemy of all humankind. Their son, Cain, murdered his brother, Abel. No pastor read comforting scriptures. No funeral director took care of arrangements. They had to dig the grave, lift Abel’s body into the hole, throw dirt over him, and live with the hole in their hearts.
          But Adam and Eve weren’t without hope. Way back in those times, in Genesis 3:15, God promised to send someone who would redeem from sin. But it wasn’t until two thousand years ago that He sent His Son for our redemption. The sins of Old Testament prophets and saints were forgiven by the blood of goats and other sacrifices only because those offerings on the altar and faith in God blotted out the sins temporarily until the Redeemer came.[1]
 The scripture passage most children learn, John 3:16, sums up what happened: “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.”
          Many of these thoughts, lessons, and God’s Word comforted my grieving heart, but I continued to search and delve into everything that had to do with eternal life.
The Bible says Jesus was and is man’s only hope.
God requires blood for redemption because sin is so serious. I know breaking any of the commandments hurts me or someone else. All I need to do to realize the seriousness of sin is to remember the bloody young lamb dying on an altar, or look at the cross with the Son of God’s blood flowing down the wood and pooling on the ground.
          I learned Jesus was God in the flesh, whom John said was there at creation (John 1:1), claimed Himself to be God, and said He existed before Abraham (John 8:58).
          He also claimed to be the Resurrection and the life (John 11:25), and He demonstrated His power over death. In the city of Nain, Jesus interrupted a youth’s funeral procession by touching the bier, the frame for carrying the dead. The pallbearers stopped, and Jesus said, “Young man, arise!”
          The youth sat up, spoke to those around him, and went home with his widowed mother (Luke 7:11–16).
          Jesus took Jarius’ twelve-year-old daughter by the hand after she died, and she rose from the dead.
          The raising of Lazarus from the tomb was, perhaps, the most spectacular—Lazarus had been buried four days (John 11:6–46). But all it took was Jesus’s shout, “Lazarus, come forth!”
          Lazarus came forth, bound hand and foot with grave clothes, with a napkin over his face.
          I noticed that those who witnessed the event had to unwrap Lazarus and let him go. But when Jesus came forth from the tomb, He didn’t need help. He even had power over the grave clothes!
          Although I put no faith in the Shroud of Turin and would not put any spiritual significance on it if it were proved to be the burial garment of Christ, I imagine Christ’s Resurrection to be such an energized event that it could leave an imprint on cloth. I would imagine the molecules and energy changing a mortal body into immortal would put off a fireworks show greater than any lightning event we’ve ever witnessed. But that’s my imagination.
          It could happen with no more outward notice than when our lives begin as a human egg, a tiny speck the human eye can barely see, but suddenly, when fertilized with sperm, bursts to life, into a beautiful baby to be born, grow, walk on the earth, die, and pass into eternity.
          I began to grasp that eternal life is no more perplexing than mortal life. Our society has made sex so dirty and disgusting, we often forget the mystery and miracle of life.
          In the Garden of Eden it was Adam and Eve formed at God’s fingertips from the dust of the earth. Today, we know the process involves sperm and eggs, but if you think of it, the process is the same. We are nothing but dust, or soil, with the exception of the spark of life God gives.
     
-- Copyright Ada Brownell 2002     


[1] See Hebrews 11

Sunday, June 29, 2014

THE TRUTH ABOUT THE ETERNAL

 Truth Sleuth

By Ada Brownell
An excerpt from Swallowed by Life:
Mysteries of Death, Resurrection and the Eternal
Truth often is elusive, even when you have witnesses, testimony, and evidence. Courts wrestle with determining truth.
          Societies historically tried many methods to expose a lie. In China, they used to fill a suspect’s mouth with uncooked rice and he would be judged guilty if he could not easily and quickly spit the rice from his mouth. The test was based on the idea that people who are trying to avoid telling the truth don’t create saliva.
          Other ancient civilizations required a suspect to grab a white-hot metal rod and carry it to a certain point.[1] If the rod burned the person’s hands and they didn’t heal by a specific date, the person was ruled guilty and punished.
          Other cruel and inaccurate methods of determining truth also were used.
          More recently, truth serum, an anesthetic or hypnotic such as thiopental sodium or sodium pentothal, was believed to cause a person to speak only the truth. A similar serum was introduced in the 1920s by a Texas obstetrician, Dr. R. E. House. He believed a person under the influence of the drug scopolamine was unable to tell a lie.
          Today we have the polygraph, which supporters say is 90 percent accurate, yet often in courtrooms the results can’t be entered as evidence.[2]   
In the days when America was a Christian nation and witnesses swore an oath with their hand on the Bible to “tell the truth and nothing but the truth, so help me God,” the swearing-in meant something. There was a day when Americans feared God. They trembled at telling a lie and knew they probably would not escape being held in contempt of court for not telling the truth. Today in many states, witnesses have the option of swearing an oath or making an affirmation to tell the truth to the best of their knowledge, without mentioning God or using a Bible.
          The best court cases depend on physical evidence and, hopefully, truthful eyewitnesses’ testimony.
I decided to go to eyewitnesses’ writings contained in the Bible to determine the truth about Jesus’s Resurrection, which is what gives Christians the hope of eternal life.
The Bible is an amazing book, written by forty different authors with varying occupations over a period of one thousand five hundred years, on three continents, and in three languages.  More historical manuscripts are available on the New Testament than any book of antiquity, and it’s difficult to doubt the divine inspiration of the Bible because the forty authors  all agree on hundreds of controversial subjects, although they were imperfect humans.
In contrast, the Book of Mormon was written by Joseph Smith and the Koran by Mohammad, with some additions by his followers.
I read through the New Testament and underlined every scripture pertaining to eternal life and resurrection.
The Apostle Paul wrote, “How say some among you that there is no resurrection of the dead? But if there be no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen: And if Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain” (1 Corinthians 15:12–14).
          When Carolyn died, I had the advantage of having not only read and studied the Bible for years, but having taught classes from Josh McDowell’s Evidence That Demands a Verdict, a book that examines facts about the Christian faith. One significant part of McDowell’s work is to determine whether the Resurrection is historical fact or a mere hoax.[3]
          The author wrote, “After more than 700 hours of studying this subject, and thoroughly investigating its foundation, I have come to the conclusion that the Resurrection of Jesus Christ is one of the ‘most wicked, vicious, heartless hoaxes ever foisted upon the minds of men, or it is the most fantastic fact of history.’”
          When a student asked McDowell why he couldn’t refute Christianity, the author answered, “For a very simple reason. I am not able to explain away an event in history--the Resurrection of Jesus Christ.”
 McDowell’s first two books were his attempts to refute Christianity. When he couldn’t, he accepted Jesus Christ as his Savior and became a Christian.[4]
          I knew the Bible has several internal claims that it is the Word of God. For instance, 2 Peter 1:21 says the Bible was written by holy men of God as they were inspired by the Holy Ghost.
I’d already read the testimony of many witnesses, but I needed to read them again. I decided to look again at the Bible’s authenticity, at the divinity of Jesus, at His miracles, and at why we can believe He was dead but came out of the tomb alive.
Several biblical writers witnessed the dead raised to life and saw Jesus’ victory over the tomb.
          I noticed what John says: “That which was from the beginning, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of the Word of life; for the life was manifested, and we have seen it, and bear witness, and show unto you that eternal life, which was with the Father and was manifested unto us” (1 John 1:1–3).
          Luke also pointed out he was an eyewitness: “Even as they delivered them unto us, which from the beginning were eyewitnesses…” (Luke 1:2).
The Apostle Peter wrote: “We have not followed cunningly devised fables, when we made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of His majesty” (2 Peter 1:16).
Do you believe Jesus rose from the dead? "If you will confess with your mouth Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved" (Romans 10:9NLT).
Belief Jesus died for your sins and walked out of the tomb alive is necessary to have eternal life.
You might as well put your faith in the most amazing thing available to man. Every idea or theory you embrace about how you got here, why you're here and where you are going takes faith--even atheism. To deny God is there you have faith everything and all the wonder in your body just happened.
Why not decide to follow Jesus today? He'll hear you when you pray and speak to you through His Word (the Bible) and witnesses. "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only son that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life" (John 3:16).

-- Copyright 2002 Ada Brownell


3 Eugene B. Block, Lie Detectors and Their Use (New York: David McKay Company, Inc., 1977), page 12.
[3] Josh McDowell, Evidence that Demands a Verdict, Here’s Life Publishers,  (Campus Crusade for Christ, San Bernadino, Calif., 1979), Revised Edition, page 179.
[4]Ibid , page 365.

Sunday, June 1, 2014

EVIDENCE WE'RE CREATED TO LIVE FOREVER



By Ada Brownell

                                               
 “Whoever lives and believes in me will never die” (John 11:26).
 Is the water that makes steam gone forever?
No, because the earth has only a certain amount of water, which is constantly in a precipitation and evaporation cycle. Clouds, which are nothing but water vapor like steam, hold water until they become so heavy it rains or snows.  Then the sun comes out, water evaporates into clouds, and the cycle continues.
Do you know the Bible says our lives are similar to vapor?  (James 4:14) But when we die, we are still somewhere, just as the water isn’t gone when it becomes steam.  We are made to live forever.
            Another amazing fact is we’re not walking around in the same bodies in which we were born, or the bodies we had last year. Our flesh developed from one cell and now each of us has about 75 trillion living cells, constantly dying, and being replaced.  Everything, except for the neurological system, has died numerous times in our , then replaced by new cells that knew exactly what to make, such as skin, blood, hair, bone and your inward parts. Our skin is estimated to be rebuilt every seven days.
 The birth and the death of cells is not the only way we know we are more than a body. For instance, we can lose weight and it doesn’t change who we are. We can have parts cut off, such as our tonsils, a wart or even a hand or leg, and still live. We can even live with someone else’s, kidney, liver or heart!
            The person you are, that God made you, is more than flesh and blood. But you also have a unique personality, and a spiritual side. When God’s powerful breath went into Adam’s nose, the eternal soul was born and every person born since then has a soul and spirit, which lives forever.
            Watchman Nee, author of The Spiritual Man,[1] said humans are a combination of spirit, soul and body.[2] A person’s spirit is where spiritual things happen.  That’s the part us where Jesus lives if we accepted Him as Savior and the Holy Spirit dwells.
Your soul is your mind, will and emotions.  That’s where you learn things, make decisions (I will or will not do something), and feel things such as love, joy, hate and jealousy.
Your body is where your soul and spirit live, and all three parts of you work together to make you the person we see and God loves.
The person you are will never die—whether you choose to give your heart and life to Jesus or choose to reject Him. God in His love, made you so you could live forever with Him, but it’s your choice.  Hell was made for Satan and the false prophets, but people who reject God also will be sent to that place of torment.
But God does love you. Jesus did die and He rose from the tomb—alive! Because He lives, we can live forever also.
©Ada Brownell

           



[1] Christian Fellowship Publishers Inc., New York, 1968
[2]Ibid, Volume 1, pages 22 and 23

Friday, April 18, 2014

EASTER: IS IT POSSIBLE TO AVOID DEATH?


By Ada Brownell
EXCERPT FROM SWALLOWED BY LIFE:
MYSTERIES OF DEATH, RESURRECTION AND THE ETERNAL
Chapter One
An old gentleman leaned on his cane and peered into the cherry-red 1923 Model T Roadster. It glistened like a new car, but just a few years earlier had rested in decay almost forgotten.
          “This is just like the first car I ever had,” he said, a twinkle in his eyes.
          He and his son were examining four antique cars brought to a senior care center as part of the National Nursing Home Week celebration.

          The man, like the Model T, was almost an antique himself.
          Before the old car found redemption, from the front bumper down to the brown leather on the rumble seat, the old Ford stood waiting for one last trip—to the junkyard. Many vehicles like it have been retrieved from gullies, from behind the barn, and from buildings and junkyards, metal-consuming rust eating away at running boards, fenders, hoods, engines, and other vital parts.
           Rust is the reddish-orange coating of ferric hydroxide, the substance that causes oxidation of metal in the car’s body. When metal rusts, it breaks down until its elements disappear into the air and into the earth, leaving holes.
          Doctors tell us oxidation occurs in the human body, too, as we age and develop diseases. We aren’t eaten by rust, but oxidation causes cell damage, and that is why nutritionists recommend we consume foods rich in antioxidants, such as blueberries and green tea. In the human body, life-essential oxygen combusts and produces by-products referred to as oxygen free radicals, which cause aging.
          Oxidation is part of the second law of thermodynamics, a scientific term we seldom talk about but see all the time when there is a loss of electrons in an atom. Every barn you see with the roof caved in is an example of this law, which says in simple terms that everything eventually falls apart because energy becomes less organized with time.
          Our bodies do the same thing. As we age our sight grows dim, the ears less discerning of sounds. Our memory slows. Our muscles and joints don’t work as well. Our skin wrinkles. Our cardiovascular system becomes clogged or diseased. Our lungs and vocal cords exhibit wear and tear. The body’s defense weakens and diseases take up residence in us. Then, like an old automobile, one functioning organ goes, and then another, until the loss of a vital part is enough to kill.
Death for the human body is connected to the degradation of matter. Our mortal flesh isn’t designed to last forever. Unless taken by death prematurely, like the unrestored Model T covered in rust and with an engine that won’t run, the human body wears out or just quits.
As I explained before, I started studying about death and life after we lost our beautiful eldest daughter, Carolyn, to cancer in 1990. A born-again Christian who could quickly tell someone else what to believe, I found my faith challenged.
When I knew Carolyn was dying, over and over I prayed, tears streaming down my face, my insides feeling ripped out, “Where are you, God?”
My guts twisted with anger and doubt. Fear choked me as I wondered if what Jesus said about eternal life was really true.

I’d heard and read what the Bible has to say. It says at death we will immediately be with the Lord (Luke 23:43, Ecclesiastes 12:6–8) and at the resurrection, in a moment, in a twinkling of an eye, our flesh will be changed into an immortal body with all-new parts that never age, get sick, or die—even if that flesh has already turned to dust.
Probably because of my experiences and what I learned on the medical beat at the newspaper, I decided to investigate if there is evidence we are more than a mere body.
I knew a journalist’s assignment sometimes goes beyond the obvious. Facts aren’t material objects that can be felt or seen. Through testimony and evidence, truth can be learned. Interviewing witnesses, experts, and victims and making visits to the scene help a reporter present facts to the public.
          Yet, when the story is all told, newspaper readers or television viewers react differently. Some believe what is reported; others do not. Some doubt the reliability of the reporter. Others assume the media conspires to deceive the public. A few believe the persons interviewed are liars.
          Those who believe take the plunge into faith. I took that plunge and believe Jesus when He said, "I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me will live, even though he dies; and whoever lives and believes in me will never die" (John 11:26).
          No matter what you believe about life after death, it takes faith. But there is evidence, and the eyewitnesses' testimony is recorded in the Bible. It's your decision.
©Copyright Ada Brownell 2012

SWALLOWED BY LIFE: Mysteries of Death, Resurrection and the Eternal

                                          By Ada Brownell

Do you know evidence shows we’re more than a physical body? The author, a prolific religion writer and retired medical journalist, talks about the evidence; the wonder of life with all its electrical systems; the awesome truth about cell death and regeneration; mysteries surrounding the change from mortal to immortal; where we go when our body dies; resurrection; and a glimpse at what we will do in heaven. Questions and answers make this non-fiction inspirational book a great text for group study. It’s written for support groups, religion classes, people with chronic or terminal illness, individuals who fear death or are curious about it, the grieving, and those who give them counsel.
An excerpt from Swallowed by Life was featured in the June 2, 2013, “Reading for Spiritual Health” edition of The Pentecostal Evangel.

Where you can find Swallowed by Life:
Barnes and Noble: http://bit.ly/JnbKVL
Booksamillion.com http://ow.ly/cJmx8
And you can see reviews on GoodReads http://ow.ly/cJmMe
Christian Publishers Outlet also has the paperback


Ada Brownell bio
Ada Brownell has been writing for Christian publications since age 15 and spent much of her life as a daily newspaper reporter. She has a B.S. degree in Mass Communications and worked most of her career at The Pueblo Chieftain in Colo., where she spent the last seven years as a medical writer. After moving to Springfield, MO in her retirement, she continues to free lance for Christian publications and write non-fiction and fiction books. She is critique group leader of Ozarks Chapter of American Christian Writers.
She is author of Imagine the Future You, a Bible study; Joe the Dreamer: The Castle and the Catapult, fiction released Jan. 15, 2013; Swallowed by Life: Mysteries of Death, Resurrection and the Eternal, Bible study released Dec. 6, 2011; and Confessions of a Pentecostal, published by the Assemblies of God’s Gospel Publishing House in 1978, out- of-print but released in 2012 for Kindle. All the books are available in paper or for Kindle.
     Twitter: @adellerella
     Blog: http://inkfromanearthenvessel.blogspot.com Stick to Your Soul Encouragement
     Amazon Ada Brownell author page: http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B001KJ2C06