VICTORY THROUGH CAPTIVITY

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Nobleton Community Church
29084 Sentinel Street PO Box 224
Nobleton, Florida 34661

Rev. Paul V. Lehmann, Pastor
813-389-8683
Nobletoncommunitychurch.org
info@nobletoncommunitychurch.org

OUR VISION IS:
To experience SPIRIT-FILLED WORSHIP AND PRAYER
To be involved in EVANGELISM, DISCIPLINING AND TRAINING PEOPLE
To use our SPIRITUAL GIFTS
To SERVE AND REACH PEOPLE FOR CHRIST, BOTH
“ACROSS THE STREET AND ACROSS THE WORLD”

Nobleton Community Church
Date September 28, 2025
Text TEXT: II Corinthians 2:12-17
Pastor Paul Lehmann

Listen to live audio here

Paul’s triumphant life in Christ is evidenced by this scripture passage. We need to understand his thinking, though, as he has been through a lot of suffering. Perhaps not all physical, but in his spirit, he also suffered because of his complete dedication to Christ. We read in chapter 1: verses 8-11, that he was so discouraged he really didn’t see how he would get out alive. But he saw in this difficulty a lesson that God wanted to teach him and us. It teaches us that we are not to place reliance in ourselves, but in God who raises the dead. Whether we have victory or not totally depends on our captor—that is, who or what is captivating us, secular humanists, Satan, or Jesus Christ.

Then in chapter two of our text this morning, Paul says, “thanks be to God who always leads us in triumphal procession, as captives”— ‘prisoners’—-we read in the TEV (the Good News Bible).

Whatever the experiences through which Paul has passed, he wants us to know that it has been a glorious victory from beginning to end. He emphasizes that because of his union with Christ, it has been one continual victory. It is a victory in a particular sense. A victory through captivity, and what Paul says about his life as a Christian should be true about the lives of each one of us today. Amidst the heartaches and disappointments, the burdens and trials, as well as the joys of Christian living and all that is involved, nevertheless, because of our union with Christ, the story should be one of continued triumph.

So let’s look at:

Three things about this: VICTORY OF TRIUMPH.

FIRST: WE MAY KNOW THAT:

WE CAN HAVE A TRIUMPHANT LIFE IN CHRIST

Paul had a very clear picture in mind when he used this illustration. It would be a picture that was familiar to the Corinthian Christians. They knew how when the generals of the Roman Empire conquered other Provinces with a decisive victory, they brought the people to complete subjugation or submission. It had to be a victory where at least 5,000 of the enemy had fallen in battle. A triumph in Rome at that time called for a magnificent procession of honor of this general, and it was the highest military distinction which he could obtain. It was granted by the “Senate” only to one who had been the actual commander-in-chief in the field and held the office of dictator or consul. In a Roman triumph, the victorious general entered the city of Rome in a chariot drawn by four horses. He was crowned with laurel around his head, and he held a scepter in one hand and a branch of laurel in the other. Marching before him were the members of the Senate and magistrates, and State officials, along with the musicians, and spoils of his victory, and the captives in chains, followed by his army on foot shouting their cry of triumph.

Picture what it was like when the Rays won the American League Championship 17 years ago, and again in 2020 (even though they lost in the World Series, and when the Bucs won the Super Bowl 22 years ago. Then, with Tom Brady in 2021 and 2023. There were parades and shouting in triumph for their tremendous seasons. In 2004, the Lightning Bolts Hockey team won the Stanley Cup. Once again, much celebration. (They won again in 2020 and 2021. When they won in 2004, we lived in the Detroit area when the Detroit Pistons won the NBA championship. There was a tremendous parade and celebration. We like our sports and we love to win championships. We don’t have conquering army parades like Paul has in his mind, when the captives (losers) marched before the chariot of the winning general. No, heathen priests swinging their censers with the sweet-smelling incense burning in them. All of this marked a tremendous day, a day that might happen only once in a lifetime! That is the picture that is in Paul’s mind. He sees the conquering Christ marching in triumph throughout the world and himself and other Christians in that procession.

Now in that procession, as I said, the priests were swinging the incense-filled censers. To the general and to the victors, the perfume from the censers would be the perfume of joy and triumph and life; but to the captives who walked so short a distance ahead of them, it was the perfume of death, for it stood for the past defeat and their coming execution.

It was also true, though, that when a conquering general came upon a province to defeat them, if they would agree to bow down and worship the emperor, their lives were spared, but if they refused, they were taken captive and executed.

In Christ as our conqueror, it’s the same thing. If we yield to Christ and allow him to reign over us, we are given abundant eternal life,

but if we refuse, the result is spiritual death and punishment. This is the way it is for the ministry of a Christian. We go forward in victory over sin and Satan, and death because of the conquering power of Christ in our lives. As we give the Gospel to others, they sense the sweet smell of life if they are victorious in Christ, but they sense death if they refuse to accept him.

Jeannene’s cousin Jeff was like that. He refused to give his life to Christ. He kept doing things that were destroying his life. First it was alcohol, then drugs. He was in and out of jail many times. Then, finally, one night, he wanted to take his life. He heard the gospel, but it was like the smell of death to him. We were home on furlough from the Congo that year. His mother had made a commitment to Christ and was going to church. Jeff lived alone in a cheap apartment. He was really stressed out because his mother had “gotten religious,” he thought. One night, Aunt Mary called me and said that Jeff was trying to commit suicide. He had turned the gas on with the oven door open. I drove over to his apartment, and I saw him sitting on the couch with his head in his hands. The outside door was open, but the screen door was shut. I called out to him, but he didn’t look up or come to the door. I called his name and walked in. I smelled the strong smell of gas coming from the kitchen, where I saw the oven door open. I sat down beside him and said, “Jeff, you don’t really want to do this, do you?” He shrugged his shoulders. I said, ‘Come on, Jeff, you had the outside door open, with just the screen door shut.’ You don’t really want to take your life. I went and shut the oven door and turned off the gas. The house could have eventually caught on fire, perhaps, but there was no immediate danger of his being overcome by escaping gas. I shared the gospel with him, but he just refused to accept Christ into his life. His mother showed up after a while and took him back to her house. Some years later, he had moved out west, and word got back to his mother that one night, he and his friends were drinking. He was in the back seat of a speeding car, and he fell out the door and was killed. How that happens, I don’t know. But when you are drunk, lots of bad things can happen.

You see, the gospel for Jeff was like a sentence of death on him. He didn’t smell the sweet smell of victory, but death. He refused to let Jesus Christ wrap His arms around him and take him into “protective custody” and give him victory over his addictions and a life that seemed hopeless.

It’s like what happened to me when I hit two little girls with my car in Kinshasa, and was able to get to the police station, for “protective custody.” If you don’t do this, the police will take no responsibility for what the crowd will do to you. (You can read about this in my book, “They meant to Kill Me.”)

My eventual release and victory in that situation was only possible because I was “taken captive,” so to speak. Otherwise, I would have been killed.

Paul was taken captive in triumph. He received liberty in bondage, and because he submitted his life to the Lord, he became a part of God’s triumphal ministry through him. He was blinded on that road to Damascus and was in total submission to others who led him to a house where a disciple named Ananias came after the Lord spoke to him in a vision, to go and lay hands on Paul so that he would receive his sight back.

The apostle Paul was a very good man. A learned teacher, a proud Pharisee. It was hard for him to realize that his self-righteousness was nothing. God had to knock him down in order to speak to him, and then he said in so many words, “Lord, put your chains of victory upon my heart. What do you want me to do?” He was taken captive in triumph. He was put into protective custody and then left in victory.

SO SECONDLY, BECAUSE WE CAN LIVE A LIFE OF TRIUMPH,

WE CAN LIVE A LIFE OF TESTIMONY.

In verse 14, we read that, “God uses us to make the knowledge about Christ spread everywhere like a sweet fragrance.” The picture that Paul put before the Corinthian Christians of the prisoners of war being dragged along the ground was their degradation, but for Paul in terms of spiritual experience, this was the greatest honor; that he could be a slave of the Master.

I wonder how many of us are the same as Paul. Do we desire to be slaves of the Lord Jesus, or do we just want the gift of salvation, but not the commitment necessary to really have victory in Christ? There is more involved in Christianity than just accepting the Christian Creed or a Statement of Faith. Even if we accept Christ through faith and receive him into our lives, and submit ourselves to him and are born-again by his Spirit, and are baptized, we must still live a life of total commitment if we call ourselves a disciple of Christ. It involves every phase of our activity. Being a slave of Jesus Christ requires a life of service.

Let’s think again about the prisoners:

who have been captured by the general in Paul’s illustration. As we see these prisoners, we can hear much applause, and we ask why the cheering? The cheering is not for the prisoners, but rather for the general. Every chain around his chariot wheels was a symbol of his power, and the broken weapons the prisoners carried were symbols of their defeat. Paul likens himself to the prisoners, his self-righteousness and ability to persecute or destroy Christians, and his willpower as weapons that have been shattered by the Lord Jesus Christ. Now all of these have been placed in the chains of the Master. It is only at this point that Paul is able to have a witnessing life. Satan tries to use many things as weapons against God and us, but if we surrender to the Lord, he will shatter these weapons, and as we become his captives and through this captivity, we will have freedom and triumph over Satan. If we give our lives to Satan, we will be led by him unto death and destruction.

FINALLY, OUR LIFE OF TRIUMPH AND TESTIMONY

BECOMES ALSO A FRAGRANT LIFE.

We read in verses 15 and 16, “For we are to God the aroma of Christ among those who are being saved and those who are perishing. To the one, we are the smell of death; to the other, the fragrance of life…”

Christians should have the unmistakable “scent” or “aroma” of Christ, discernible alike to those who accept Christ and also those who reject him and are heading for death. You may tell everyone that you are a Christian, a baptized church member, but maybe those who live around you cannot see Christ in your life. The old habits are still hanging on. When we say we know Christ, but our life shows otherwise, the scent you give off is one that leads to death.

It is like on the farm when we used to haul manure. You just couldn’t get the smell off until you got out of those clothes and scrubbed down. My mother didn’t want me coming into the house until those clothes were off and down in the basement. The smell just won’t go away. But that same smell, when driving through the countryside today, is a sweet aroma to me. I used to comment to my kids about what a beautiful smell. They thought I was nuts and made fun of me. But you see, it was very nostalgic for me, with lots of good memories. It became a “good smell.”

We must give off the fragrance of Christ so that our testimony is meaningful. We must live so that others see Christ in our lives, and then they, too, will want what we have. They will want to live like Christ, too. I wonder if God can say of us like he said of Christ, “This is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased.” If we have really been taken captive for the Lord and bound in chains to his chariot, so to speak, God the Father looks down and sees Christ in you and you in Christ, and then says, Yes, this is my beloved son. This is my beloved daughter. His perfume or fragrance should be going out from us, reflecting the triumph he has accomplished in our lives.

Jeannene likes “Romance” perfume. Whenever she runs out, I buy her a new bottle. It is rather expensive, but it lasts a long time. But suppose when I bring it home, she puts it in a dresser drawer and never wears it. I would think, “What is this? I gave you that perfume to wear, not stuff it in a drawer and never wear it.” But many Christians do the same thing. Not with perfume, but we have been given so much, yet we keep tightly sealed in ourselves. No one passing near would know for a moment that we have the life of God in us, because not the least small scent is allowed to come forth. But God’s way is that we are unto him a sweet fragrance of Christ, to those who are being saved, and to those who reject Christ, the smell of death. What a responsibility this is. A person who meets you who does not care for the things of God should be convicted by the Holy Spirit by your life, if you are giving off the scent of Christ. Your life should be so changed, so different, and be so much like Christ that others see him in you and sense his presence because of your commitment to him. In this way, he comes off as a fragrance that is pleasing to others and that draws others to him. If your life doesn’t do this, you are not really living a victorious Christian life. It is not a life of triumph, it is not a life that testifies, and it isn’t a fragrant life.

Paul is showing us how our union with Christ, which is the status of true Christians, produces victory through Christ. As we make him Lord of our lives, he leads us through life triumphantly. His blood was shed in the spiritual battle against sin, death, and the grave. He came through victoriously and has given us life. There is victory in him.

VICTORY IS YOURS, IF YOU WANT IT

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Nobleton Community Church
29084 Sentinel Street PO Box 224
Nobleton, Florida 34661

Rev. Paul V. Lehmann, Pastor
813-389-8683
Nobletoncommunitychurch.org
info@nobletoncommunitychurch.org

OUR VISION IS:
To experience SPIRIT-FILLED WORSHIP AND PRAYER
To be involved in EVANGELISM, DISCIPLINING AND TRAINING PEOPLE
To use our SPIRITUAL GIFTS
To SERVE AND REACH PEOPLE FOR CHRIST, BOTH
“ACROSS THE STREET AND ACROSS THE WORLD”

Nobleton Community Church
Date September 21, 2025
Text Joshua 8:1-29
Pastor Paul Lehmann

Listen to live audio here

Our text speaks about the tiny city of AI. From all indications, this city should have been a pushover for Israel as they marched through Canaan. However, in Chapter 7, Israel experienced its only defeat when it attacked the little city of Ai. In that battle, 36 of their soldiers died, and Israel was forced to flee from Ai.

Israel experienced this defeat for a couple of reasons.

FIRST,

THEY FAILED TO SEEK THE LORD’S WILL

BEFORE THEY WENT INTO BATTLE.

They were arrogant and proud after their victory at Jericho. They assumed they were beyond defeat. They learned that wasn’t the case.

Another reason they suffered this defeat was:

BECAUSE THERE WAS SIN AMONG THEM IN THEIR CAMP

When Israel faced Jericho in Chapter 6, they were commanded to destroy the city, but they were to take the wealth of the city and dedicate it to the Lord. A man named Achan took some of that wealth for himself and brought the wrath of God upon the whole nation. Because of these two failures, Israel suffered a tragic defeat at Ai.

The Lord used the defeat at Ai to teach Israel the importance of holiness and of seeking the Lord’s will in every situation. He used this defeat to teach them the danger of pride. Proverbs 16:18 says, “Pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall. One of the most valuable lessons Israel learned was the truth that they needed the Lord. His presence and His power, if they were going to defeat their enemies and walk in VICTORY.

There is a sense in which we believers are a lot like Israel. If you are a child of God, then you know something about battles. You know that you have very powerful enemies that must be overcome every day you live. The world, the flesh, and the devil are all out to destroy the child of God, but each of these enemies can be defeated if they are handled according to the will of God. God will not bring blessing if there is unconfessed sin “in the camp” (so to speak). It doesn’t have to be blatant sins of the flesh; it is more likely to be sins of a heart attitude that is not of the Lord.

As we move into these verses, I want you to see that Ai is a picture of one of our enemies. Ai is a picture of the flesh. The word “AI” means “a heap of ruins.” That is a good way to describe our flesh, of our fallen, human nature.” Paul reminds us about the wickedness of the flesh in Romans 7:18. “For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) there is no good thing. “Our flesh is dead, (Eph. 2:1), and “it is absolutely wicked and unredeemable” Romans 3:10-23) OUTSIDE OF Jesus Christ.

Ai is first mentioned in the book of Genesis in connection with the life of Abraham, Gen. 12:8, 13:3. The Bible tells us that Abraham pitched his tent “between Bethel and Ai.” Now, the name “Bethel” means “the house of God.” Like Abraham, many of God’s people have pitched their tents somewhere between “the house of God” and “a heap of ruins.”

Do you see the connection? You can either live in a place of victory and blessing, or you can live in a place of defeat and misery. You can either have a Bethel kind of life or an Ai experience. The kind of life you live will be determined by where you pitch your tent.

Just like Israel, we often lose battles with our flesh, but by God’s help, we can learn how to defeat our Ai and walk away with the victory in our lives.

I don’t know the battles that you are fighting with your flesh, but I do know that you are fighting something, because we all are at some point. It may be physical, or it may be spiritual, or BOTH.

I DO KNOW THAT: YOU CAN EXPERIENCE VICTORY OVER YOUR AI.

These verses have something to teach us about how that can become a reality in our lives. Notice with me the truths that present themselves in this passage. I want to preach on the thought.:

VICTORY IS YOURS IF YOU WANT IT

In verses 1 and 2, VICTORY OVER AI IS PROMISED

Verse 1: —IS A WORD ABOUT WINNING. When the Lord speaks to Joshua, God tells him to go to Ai. God promises Joshua that things will be different this time. He assures Joshua and Israel of the victory.

It is interesting that the Lord called them to return to the place of their greatest defeat. God knew that they needed to overcome Ai before they could move on in the conquest of Canaan.

The same is true for us, How many times have we lost the battle to the flesh? How many times have we been defeated by this old, sinful nature’s lust for the forbidden? How many times have we fallen and wondered if we would ever get back to where we were before?

If that has been your experience, the Lord has a word for you today! He says to Joshua. “FEAR NOT”. I have given into your hand the king of Ai, and his people, and his city, and his land. And you shall do to Ai and her king as you did to Jericho and her king.”

To those who have fallen and have lost a battle to the flesh, God says:

Fear not! I am able to give you the victory.

God has made some tremendous promises to his children

We do not have to live in defeat!

We are no longer slaves to sin, the flesh, and the devil

. “For sin shall not be your master, because you are not under law, but under grace.” Romans 6 :14

We have been made “new creatures” in Jesus Christ. “Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature; old things are passed away, behold, all things are become new 2 Corinthians 5:17 In the NIV it says: The old has gone and the new has come.

We have been given everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of him who called us…

”He has given us his very great and precious promises, so that through them you may participate in the divine nature, and escape the corruption that is in the world caused by evil desires.” (2 Peter 1:4)

We are indwelt by the Holy Spirit, who teaches us about the Spirit of truth, Come, he will guide you into all truth…” John 15:13

God has promised victory to his children. But thanks be to God, He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. 1 Cor. 15:57

The Lord did not save you to leave you defeated, beaten, and enslaved by the flesh. He saved you to set you free, to enable you to walk in the victory that he gives to all those who walk according to his word and his will.

Now in verse 2, we have: A WORD ABOUT WAITING (Jeannene and I learned to wait on the Lord in 1975 when we were returning to Zaire. We were anxious to go to the Capital city of Kinshasa, but God had other plans that were the best for us and for the Church.)

Notice that the Lord tells them that they will do to Ai what they did to Jericho, except this time, they are allowed to take all the spoils for themselves! If Achan had waited just a few more days, he could have had all the riches that he could have imagined. Instead, he ran ahead of God and grabbed for himself what God had forbidden, and as a result, Achan and Israel paid a terribly high price.

What a lesson for you and me today! If we could just learn to WAIT on God and let him lead and bring into our lives the things that need to be there, we would be far better off, because we would see his blessing. The flrsh is impatient. Our flesh wants what it wants and it wants it now. It doesn’t want to wait for its gratification.

We are better off waiting on the Lord to bring those things into our lives that he knows are best for us than we are to run ahead of God. But that’s what we do, isn’t it? Too often. We make our plans, do our thing, and never check with God about it. Are we doing things in God’s time, or ours? Let alone even doing things that God condemns in His Word. Then, when we make a mess, we ask and expect him to “bail us out.”

When we can learn to be patient and wait on the Lord, we are well on our way to victory in the Christian life.

*Wait for the LORD, and keep his way, and he will exalt you to inherit the land: when the wicked are cut off, you will see it.” Psalm 37:34

“Wait for the LORD: be strong and take heart; and wait for the LORD.” Psalm 27:14

Not only do we see that Victory over AI is promised, but also in verses 3-26, we see

VICTORY OVER AI IS PURSUED

So for us, as we pursue spiritual victory, we can experience God at work, just like the army of Israel did.

In verses 3-17, THEY EXPERIENCED GOD’S PLAN

God told them in exact detail how they were to mount their attack against Ai. They were to lay an ambush for Ai, and they would take the city and all its inhabitants. Israel learned at Jericho what happens when you do things the Lord’s way. They had also learned what happens when they refused to do it God’s way. They learned that failure awaits the person who goes against the will of the Lord.

We need to learn this lesson today! When you fight the battle God’s way, you cannot fail. When we do it our way, we are headed for trouble.

We are talking about fighting this flesh and its lusts. If you are going to pursue victory over your flesh, and if you ever expect to gain the victory, then you must go about it God’s way. No other plan will work! We need constant contact with the spiritual support God has given us. We are strengthened spiritually when we are exposed to the spiritual blessings the Lord has given to us to help us walk in his will. God’s spiritual support system must be made a huge part of our lives.

What are the things we need in our lives?

  1. We need the Word of God, I Peter 2:2; 2 Tim 2:15
  2. We need prayer. Luke 18:1:1; I Thess. 5:17; James 4:2 (you don’t have because you don’t ask, you don’t receive because you ask with wrong motives.)
  3. We need faithful church attendance. (You may think you can worship God anywhere. You don’t have to always “go to church.” That’s true. But it is also true that the body of believers needs you. You can’t have fellowship with the church body when you are out on a boat _We read in Hebrews 10:25, “Don’t neglect the assembling of yourselves together.”
  4. We need the constant fellowship of the saints—–I Cor. 12:27 None of these things will give victory in and of themselves, but we need each of them to strengthen us and to help us grow in the Lord. When we begin to neglect even one of these essential areas, then we are headed toward spiritual trouble. When we feed the flesh and ignore our spiritual needs, it is a sign of impending problems in our spiritual lives and in our church.

TACTICS OF THE ENEMY

Scroll down past Sermon for more info

Nobleton Community Church
29084 Sentinel Street PO Box 224
Nobleton, Florida 34661

Rev. Paul V. Lehmann, Pastor
813-389-8683
Nobletoncommunitychurch.org
info@nobletoncommunitychurch.org

OUR VISION IS:
To experience SPIRIT-FILLED WORSHIP AND PRAYER
To be involved in EVANGELISM, DISCIPLINING AND TRAINING PEOPLE
To use our SPIRITUAL GIFTS
To SERVE AND REACH PEOPLE FOR CHRIST, BOTH
“ACROSS THE STREET AND ACROSS THE WORLD”

Nobleton Community Church
Date September 14, 2025
Text I Peter 5:7-8
Pastor Wayne Augustine

Listen to live audio here

TWO KINDS OF SMART

Scroll down past Sermon for more info

Nobleton Community Church
29084 Sentinel Street PO Box 224
Nobleton, Florida 34661

Rev. Paul V. Lehmann, Pastor
813-389-8683
Nobletoncommunitychurch.org
info@nobletoncommunitychurch.org

OUR VISION IS:
To experience SPIRIT-FILLED WORSHIP AND PRAYER
To be involved in EVANGELISM, DISCIPLINING AND TRAINING PEOPLE
To use our SPIRITUAL GIFTS
To SERVE AND REACH PEOPLE FOR CHRIST, BOTH
“ACROSS THE STREET AND ACROSS THE WORLD”

Nobleton Community Church
Date September 7, 2025
Text James 3:13-4:10 (Reading verses 13-17 of chapter 3 and verses 1-10 of chapter 4)
Pastor Paul Lehmann

Listen to live audio here

I’m sure that: You have heard that we use only 10% of our brains at any given time. There was a movie that came out in 2011 entitled “Limitless.” I never saw the movie, but the review of it says that it takes that idea and runs with it, spinning a story about a writer who takes a secret experimental drug that allows him to use 100% of his mind. This causes him, until the drug wears off, to be the perfect version of himself, incredibly creative and attentive. Everything he’s ever read or seen is instantly organized in his mind and available for him to use in whatever way he needs. While he’s taking the pills, he’s such a radiant and appealing person that people are immediately drawn to him. And with his entire mind focused like a laser, he’s able to grasp the details of complex business situations and outguess the stock market, a skill he uses to great financial success.

Of course, there’s a wrinkle—-bad guys who want to get their hands on this drug and kill anyone else who has it. The movie apparently is an action-thriller that keeps you engaged until its surprising end. If nothing else, the movie presents one vision of what any of us might be able to do and how dazzling we’d be if only we could use 100% of our brains.

But here’s the problem. Turns out, we’re already using most of our brains! The old assertion that we are using only 10% is a myth. Now that we have better technology —like PET scans and MRIs—for studying brain activity, researchers have found that any mentally complex activity uses many areas of the brain, and over a day, just about every part of our brain gets a workout. Other evidence that the entire brain is operating most of the time, makes a devastating impact on us to discover what even a small amount of brain damage has on a person.

Our text in James is basically saying, however, that even if we’re brain-smart, we might still be dumb—we might still do really stupid things. For instance there is a list that was published showing the 10 top stupid (or dumb) things people do.

  1. Cannon ball into a two-foot deep pool.
  2. Cut coupons and never use them.
  3. Order diet soda a t a fast food restaurant.
  4. Wash clothes without separating the whites and colors
  5. Wash clothes without putting soap in the machine.
  6. Park in a Tow Away Zone for two minutes and then wonder why you got a parking ticket.
  7. Not vote and then complain about the president.
  8. Gossip about people who gossip
  9. Marry a person you met at a bar and then wonder why it’s not working out.
  10. Pick up a porcupine.

In our reading,

James talks of wisdom that is from above and wisdom that is earthbound, and he makes his remarks to Christian believers. In verse 16, James speaks of “disorder,”

About that: commentator Thorsten Moritz says;

“It is a reference to the schizophrenic situation in which Christians who are double-minded find themselves. They claim possession of wisdom from above on the one hand, while on the other hand they display the fruits of wisdom from below.” Earthbound, human smart isn’t always very smart.

James, who was very concerned about how Christians behaved with one another in the faith community, saw that the community was fit and vigorous only when it was hyperlinked to divine wisdom. James’s distinction between the two kinds of smart is especially clear in

The Message –Eugene Peterson’s New Testament in contemporary English. James 3:13-17 reads like this:

“It’s the way you live, not the way you talk, that counts. Mean-spirited ambition isn’t wisdom. Boasting that you are wise isn’t wisdom. Twisting the truth to make yourselves sound wise isn’t wisdom. It’s the furthest thing from wisdom—it’s animal cunning, devilish conniving. Whenever you’re trying to look better than others or get the better of others, things fall apart and everyone ends up at the other’s throats. Real wisdom, God’s wisdom, begins with a holy life and is characterized by getting along with others. It is gentle and reasonable, overflowing with mercy and blessings, not hot one day and cold the next, not two-faced. You can develop a healthy, robust community that lives right with God, and enjoy its results only if you do the hard work of getting along with each other, treating each other with dignity and honor.”

When it’s put that plainly, we might want to say that this so-called earthbound smarts is not smarts at all, and James acknowledges that when he says.

“It’s the furthest thing from wisdom—it’s animal cunning, devilish conniving.” But he’s meeting people where they are, where even some Christians viewed people who were getting ahead by mean-spirited boasting, twisting the truth and pitting one person against another, as cunningly wise.

It may sound strange to say that even some Christians admired such persons, but sometimes there is a begrudging admiration for the cons among us, or the bullies who get away with their behavior because of their brilliance in other ways. Steve Jobs comes to mind. He probably was not a Christian, but:

On some level—we admire at least what he accomplished before he died? His biographer, Walter Isaacson, compares him to Thomas Alva Edison (1847-1931), who was known as the “Wizard of Menlo Park.” He was a prolific inventor a little more than a hundred years ago. Edison was a 19th-century Steve Jobs, the Genius (Jobs hated the word) of Silicon Valley. Jobs changed the world we live in, as did Edison. We can’t go through a single hour anymore without being affected in some way by a product Jobs created.

Yet as smart as he was, he was a beast of a human being to work with or work for. Isaacson cites colleagues, friends, family, and acquaintances, and the adjectives that come rolling off the tongue include autocratic, controlling, changeable, temperamental, cold, absent, obsessive, distant, passionate, rebellious, and so on. He shouted, he yelled, he bad-mouthed people, and he misled. He was a jerk. “Velvety diplomacy was…not a part of his repertoire,” writes Isaacson.

He was also only one of the most influential people of the past 40 years. His mantra might be identified by the ad campaign Apple ran for some time: Think Different. The grammatically incorrect spelling was intentional. It was a choice to challenge unconventional thinking.

Jobs knew that for Apple to succeed, the company had to not only have a kind of smarts that was unlike its competitors, but that it had to encourage its customers to tap into their own creativity. He also spotted the wisdom in the idea that “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication—a word which itself is rooted in the Greek word for wisdom, sophia.”

So, isn’t it true that we’re sometimes in awe of people who, on the basis of their brain-power, carve out a moneymaking niche for themselves? People who think differently, like Mark Zuckerberg launching Facebook from his college dorm room, jobless J.K. Rowling writing the Harry Potter series from a story idea she thought of, and young Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak founding Apple in Jobs’ garage. Isn’t there a kind of wisdom that many of us envy? Or how many of us have said something like, “I wish I’d had the wisdom to invest in ————–some successful company—-like McDonald’s in 1958 or shortly after. Or Walmart when it first started. Or more recently—Google or Bit coin.

What we get from our text is that Christians don’t automatically get a dose of heavenly smarts. The other kind of wisdom—the world’s wisdom—to often predominates in the community of faith.

Commenting on this passage, Luke Timothy Johnson says that James “is addressing members of the Christian community who gather in the name of Jesus and profess the faith of the glorious Lord Jesus Christ, but whose attitudes and actions are not yet fully in friendship with God.”

FOR US IT IS CLEAR THAT SOMETIMES,

OUR ATTITUDES AND ACTIONS ARE

NOT YET FULLY IN FRIENDSHIP WITH GOD.

Johnson is not condemning this congregation, but simply recognizing that conversion does not remove the ambiguity of life and that complete consistency “is not given by a first commitment. It is slowly and painfully won through many conversions.” He also says,

“There is always double-mindedness, even among those who truly want to know God and be friends of God. The wisdom from below is not easy to abandon or avoid, precisely because:

The ‘way of the world is,’ inscribed not only in the language and literature of our surrounding culture but also in our very hearts.”

The true story is told of this “Bowery bum” as he describes himself, wonders drunk as a skunk into a downtown mission. He’s come to the mission for the free dinner but stays for the service, and when the preacher gives an altar call, this man, Frank, goes forward, where a counselor prays with him. He says that night was the big turnaround for him as he repented of his sin and received Christ into his life. Although it doesn’t always happen this way, Frank doesn’t ever drink again after going to the altar that night.

But he says that in many ways, his conversion was only a start. He felt that his sins had been forgiven, but in most ways, he was the same self-centered, profane, bigoted, uncaring person he’d been—except that now, he was attending worship services in a church where he prayed and started listening for God

. There came a time when:

He realized that he had to give himself completely over to the power and control of the Holy Spirit, or he would just keep on being this saved man, who continues to walk in his carnal flesh. So one by one, God revealed things to Frank that he needed to give up or rethink or do differently or take on if he was to continue following Jesus, and growing in His grace.

Little by little, he began to make those adjustments—more changes—but he never said or even felt like he had “arrived,” but he had a sense of where—and toward whom—he was headed.

The point I want us to understand is not the nature of Frank’s conversion, but that:

He didn’t get “divine wisdom” all at once, but after he “got saved,” (and the alcohol problem was a big one to be delivered from), he was filled with the Holy Spirit in a crisis experience of realization that he had to surrender everything to the Lord. Then his spiritual growth and his knowledge of the Lord became progressive. The appropriation of wisdom that is from above is a lifelong learning event, and that should not discourage us, but animate us. C.S. Lewis, puts it this way using a house—-a lifelong building project—for a metaphor:

Imagine yourself as a living house. God come in to rebuild that house. At first, perhaps, you can understand what he is doing. He is getting the drains right and stopping the leaks in the roof and so on…. But presently, he starts knocking the house about in a way that hurts and does not seem to make sense. What on Earth is he up to? The explanation is that he is building quite a different house from the one you thought of—throwing out a new wing here, putting on an extra floor there, running up towers, making courtyards. You thought you were going to be made into a decent little cottage; but he is building a palace. He intends to come and live in it himself.

If current brain research is correct, we’re already using most of our brains each day. But that doesn’t keep us from being double-minded.

Maybe we’re giving only 10% of our thinking power toward living a holy life. That doesn’t disqualify us from discipleship—-but it gives us lots of room for growth…and lots of room for Jesus to build on. We need to give 100% of not only our thinking power but :

We need to give 100% of ourselves to Him, so He can wholly sanctify us, purify us, and take control of our lives. He wants to walk with us, and live His life through us.

Won’t you let him do that this morning?

That’s the wisdom He imparts to us.

James tells us that in order to come to this place we must resist the devil, who will do everything he possibly can to keep us from this. But when we take the step he runs away.

When we walk close to the Lord, He comes closer and closer to us.

DON’T BE A BUSYBODY

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Nobleton Community Church
29084 Sentinel Street PO Box 224
Nobleton, Florida 34661

Rev. Paul V. Lehmann, Pastor
813-389-8683
Nobletoncommunitychurch.org
info@nobletoncommunitychurch.org

OUR VISION IS:
To experience SPIRIT-FILLED WORSHIP AND PRAYER
To be involved in EVANGELISM, DISCIPLINING AND TRAINING PEOPLE
To use our SPIRITUAL GIFTS
To SERVE AND REACH PEOPLE FOR CHRIST, BOTH
“ACROSS THE STREET AND ACROSS THE WORLD”

Nobleton Community Church
Date August 31, 2025
Text II Thessalonians 3:1-18
Pastor Paul Lehmann

Listen to live audio here

(This morning, we want to conclude Paul’s letters to the Thessalonians. But first, I would like to review some things in I Thessalonians.

In his first letter, he praised them for the way they received the Gospel. It came to them not just in words but in power. They became models for all the believers in Macedonia and Achaia. Their faith had become known everywhere. Paul had been suffering and longed to get back to see them again. When Timothy brought back a good report to him, he was encouraged to pray for them even more. He wrote to them and encouraged them to be sanctified. This is the only way to live to please God. They were to avoid sexual immorality and not live like the pagans. They were not to take advantage of a brother or sister in the church. The Lord will punish those who commit such sins. God did not call us to be impure but to live a holy life.

For those who had died, he told them it was natural to grieve their loss, but the good news is that we don’t grieve like those who have no hope. (Like the pagans do). Then we have that wonderful passage about the end times. He tells us that when Christ comes back again, He will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. Then all of us who are still alive will meet him in the air. And so we will be with the Lord forever. Paul tells us to encourage one another with these words.

He reminds us not to quench the Spirit. Don’t put out the fire of the Holy Spirit. We look forward to the day of the Lord. It will come upon people like a thief in the night. They will be surprised, but we who are expecting him should be awake and sober, and not be surprised. We are to put on faith and love as a breastplate, and the hope of salvation as a helmet. For God did not appoint us to suffer wrath but to receive salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ.

Now this is a key passage to realize that when God pours out his wrath on all of those who refused to believe in Jesus as their Savior, we won’t be subject to this. He will remove all believers from his judgment and wrath, which will be poured out at the end of the Great Tribulation. In chapter five of I Thessalonians, he tells us that we are not to be concerned about the times and dates.

In chapters 1 and 2 of II Thessalonians. The Lawless One has to be revealed, and there is a rebellion against God led by him. He will oppose God and exalt himself over everything that is called God or is worshipped, so that he sets himself up in God’s temple, proclaiming himself to be God. When all of this occurs, stand firm and hold fast to the Word. (the teachings). May the Lord Jesus Christ, by his grace, give us eternal encouragement and good hope.

Okay: Now let’s look at today’s passage: Chapter 3 verses 1-18.

Paul is asking the Thessalonians for prayer. I would like to ask each one of you for a prayer too. We live in a day when there are many changes taking place in our society. Ten years ago, there were five Supreme Court Justices out of nine who voted to allow same-sex marriages. In fact to declare that there is no State that has the right to refuse this. Fifty years ago, maybe even just twenty years ago, we would never have believed that this could happen. It is unclear where this will go, but one thing that those who are pushing this agenda will want to force all churches to comply. Some churches have no problem with this, but I declare to you, that if a pastor or church has no problem with this, they do not believe that the Bible is the inspired Word of God. They pick and choose only those passages that fit what they believe, rather than what God’s Word teaches.

Paul is saying in verse 2 that he would be delivered from “wicked and evil people, for NOT EVERYONE HAS FAITH. But the Lord is faithful and he will strengthen you and protect you from the evil one.

There will be times when you may have to defend the position that the Bible definition of marriage is between one man, and one woman. Whatever man decides is “marriage,” is not the Biblical definition. Probably everyone of us has someone in our family, or a close friend’s family, that you have found out they are Gay. Not everyone, though, is pushing to get married. I find it ironic that in this day, when heterosexual couples are not getting married before they live together, and even before they have children, the Gay community is pushing their agenda to have the right to get married. One thing that is too often neglected is that sin is sin. Premarital sex is a sin, and homosexual sex is a sin. Neither one is excluded from what God calls sin. Therefore, we must continue to love Gays, just like we continue to love Heterosexual couples who live together but are not married. We must know God’s Word in order to talk to people in love, to let them know what the Bible says and not what society is accepting.

Then, in verse 6, we are told that we are to keep away from every believer who is idle and disruptive and does not live according to the teaching that they had received from Paul.

1.. Follow the example of integrity.

Paul says…in verse 7

For you yourselves know how you ought to follow our example.

He said that because he had just finished saying …in verse 6

… keep away from every brother who is idle and does not live according to the teaching you received from us.

Paul is saying you’ve got good examples to follow and you’ve got bad examples to follow. Follow the good example — my example.

Now, when Paul says “keep away from every brother who is idle,” he’s not talking about the Amish practice of shunning, where you cut off all social contact with a person. In fact, in verse 14, he says that we should not treat these people as enemies, but rather warn them as brothers.

So, when he says “keep away,” he’s talking about the amount of influence you let that person have in your life.

Paul says, “Follow the example of integrity.”

For everyone you know — every friend, every co-worker, every family member — you will have to decide: What level of influence will I extend to this person? Is this someone whose example I can follow? Or is this someone who desperately needs my good example?

Another way to say it is: Will I be this person’s student, or will I be this person’s teacher? Now, in your best relationships, you will be both. It will be a case of iron sharpening iron, and one person sharpening another. As we read in [Proverbs 27:17] But you need to be selective with who you let sharpen you. Paul said, “Follow our example.” In his first letter to the Thessalonians, he said…You became imitators of us and of the Lord.

(I Thessalonians 1:6)

We need to determine exactly what it is about certain people that is worth imitating: The way this man leads his family; the way this woman speaks so kindly to everyone, even when people are rude to her; the way this person is always on time; the way this person always tells the truth, even when it hurts; the way this person exudes the presence of the Holy Spirit; the way this person can listen without interrupting; the way this person has an attitude of no condemnation; and on and on.

In fact, every time I think of a character quality that I need to develop, the first thing I ask is: Who do I know who has this quality? How can I learn it the way they learned it?

If you want to develop good character, make the intentional, on-purpose decision to always follow the example of integrity.

Here’s the second thing I want you to see today.

  1. Follow the path of responsibility.

Paul says..Verse.11: WE HEAR THAT SOME OF YOU ARE IDLE.

                     THEY ARE NOT BUSY:  THEY ARE BUSY-BODIES

Verse 12: Such people we command and urge in the Lord Jesus Christ to settle down and earn the bread they eat.

We’ve all heard the saying, “An idle mind is the devil’s playground.” You could also say, “An idle life is the devil’s playground,” because when you are idle and unproductive, you create a lot of room in your life for a wide variety of bad decisions.

That’s why Paul goes on to say…

Verse 13: And as for you, brothers, never tire of doing what is right.

What’s he saying? He’s saying follow the path of responsibility.

Here’s a good question to ask yourself — especially when you don’t really have anything to do. Ask yourself, “What’s the most responsible thing I can do right now?”

Sometimes the most responsible thing you can do is close your eyes and go to sleep. Sometimes the most responsible thing you can do is get out of bed. Sometimes the most responsible thing you can do is to give your undivided attention to your spouse, or your child. Sometimes the most responsible thing you can do is to read something, learn something, study something. Sometimes the most responsible thing you can do is to reward yourself with a movie, or some uplifting entertainment.

Get in the habit of asking yourself, “Is what I am about to do the most responsible thing I can do? If not, what is?”

Character is not something that you will just accidentally stumble upon. If you’re going to get there, you’re going to get there on purpose. Follow the path of responsibility.

Here’s the third thing I want you to see. If you want to develop character…

  1. Follow the practice of accountability.

Paul was saying to the Thessalonians that there were some among them who were idle and unproductive, then he said…

10 …when we were with you, we gave you this rule: “If a man will not work, he shall not eat.” He also said…14 If anyone does not obey our instruction in this letter, take special note of him. Do not associate with him, in order that he may feel ashamed.

15 Yet do not regard him as an enemy, but warn him as a brother.

There are people in this world who want to live according to their rules; they want to do things their way without having to answer anyone — and they still want everything they think they’re entitled to . As a person of character, this cannot be you. You need people in your life who will hold you accountable for what you say and do. At the same time, as a person of character, you can’t let yourself get talked into a situation in which you are carrying someone’s load, with no accountability on their part. If you do, it’s a disservice to the other person. We need accountability. We need to answer to someone for the decisions that we make. People who have no accountability usually fail in the area of responsibility.

I’ve seen it happen more times than I can count — in churches, in businesses, and in families. I’ve seen churches organized in such a way that the pastor answers to no one. I’ve never seen that model of church government work successfully over the long haul. Without accountability, it’s too easy to fall into the I’m not going to work, but I still want to eat mentality. People of character don’t take that risk. They set up accountability structures in their life to help keep them focused and on track.So let me ask you: How accountable are you? Think about your accountability in these areas.

Your work life. Most people have a boss. If you don’t, if you’re self-employed, do you have someone to answer to? Can you think of how maybe you could be more productive in your work if you set up an accountability structure?

Your personal life. Are there parts of your personal life that are hidden from everyone? Are you the only one who knows your password, for example? Do you panic when someone asks to borrow your phone or use your computer? Are you spending money that your spouse doesn’t know about? Do you make unilateral decisions without consulting anyone else? Can you think of a way that you could open up levels of accountability in your marriage and home life?

How about your spiritual life? Is there anyone to keep you on your toes? Can you go days without praying or reading the Bible — and no one would ever know? Is there some way you could establish accountability with someone whose spiritual leadership you trust? It’s as simple as this. People of character are accountable, and they hold others accountable as well. There’s a contagious nature to character. In fact, character must be caught before it can be taught. You can say it this way: If you want to develop character, be careful what you catch, be careful what you pass on.

What does that mean?

It means that if you want to become a person of character, you have to make a conscious decision to surround yourself with the right people of good influence and protect yourself from those who aren’t heading in the right direction. You also want to think about how you’re influencing others.

Look closely at the examples you follow, and the example you set for others. Look closely at your level of responsibility. Are you doing the best you can with what you have? Look closely at your system of accountability. Have you organized your life so that you’re not able to get away with anything, so to speak? Have you organized your life so that people of integrity have the right to offer correction? And are you willing to do the same for people who seek your leadership? Character doesn’t happen by accident. It’s intentional. So…

Make it your intention to catch the right qualities and to pass them on to those around you.