What if every sin you committed showed up as your Facebook status update?

And it did so instantly and in real time? Woah.

Can you imagine status updates like this?

  • ___________ just stole money from the cash register at work.
  • ___________ is drunk, and cussing out his neighbor.
  • ___________ is viewing pornography and ___________.
  • ___________ is attempting to sleep with a guy she met at a club.
  • ___________ is pridefully thinking he’s better than everyone else while he reads Facebook status updates.

Were it this way, would you be more addicted to Facebook than you already are?

Shame on you! (but I might be too).

I don’t know why this thought about sin showing up in status messages struck me, but it did and I caught myself thinking, “Man, I’d be a lot more careful!”

Now I have to ask the question … why?

Psalm 139, Matthew 6, many Proverbs and other Scriptures remind us that God sees everything, and He’s the only one that ultimately matters.

So your sins show up as your Facebook status updates in real time. Everyone sees. What difference should that make?

If you’re a disciple of Jesus … none, but you know it would.

Being aware that others really know what’s going on in our lives causes us to be vulnerable in a way we’re not with God. Perhaps we take His omnipresence for granted. Perhaps we’ve written off the old saying, “God sees all,” as a mindless cliché. Perhaps we don’t really believe He notices everything we do.

Regardless of the reason, there’s something about knowing another person is aware of our sin that causes most people to want to get over it and stay over it.

Years ago I struggled with an addiction to pornography. I knew God saw me and what I was doing and I knew I was dishonoring Him by my actions. I tried numerous times to get over this sin on my own, but I couldn’t do it.

It wasn’t until I got others involved that I broke the habit. I confessed my struggle to a few of the guys at church, and told my newlywed wife what was going on. Then I took it a step further.

I bought a calendar, hung it on the wall in a room of our house, and told my wife that each day I stayed pure in that area I would mark an ‘X’ on the calendar for that day. I knew that every day my wife would see that calendar, and I decided I was not going to disappoint her.

That added layer of accountability helped me heal from that sin. With God’s help and the help of others I’d confessed my struggle to, I healed from an addiction to pornography.

While most of you would find Facebook reporting your sins involuntarily to be horrible, have you ever thought about sharing your struggles with someone else … voluntarily?

It could be that’s the missing ingredient in the recipe to help you truly get over it:

James 5:16
16 Therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective.

Confession and the prayer of others = healing.

I found this healing the Bible speaks of … and I didn’t even need Facebook to confess my sins for me.

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Congrats to C.I.A. Corpus Christi!

Just wanted to give a shout out to everyone involved in CIA (Christians In Action) Corpus Christi!

I received word this week that the administration at Texas A & M Corpus named CIA “Campus Organization of the Year” for 2010.

Great job Corpus crew!

CIA’s Corpus plant is led by Clint & Kelsey Hill (check out Clint’s blog here), and is one of three ministries planted through Campus Ministry United (CMU) within the past three years.

I have the privilege of serving as the administrative director for CMU – an organization that plants evangelistic, Church of Christ campus ministries around the country. More troops are in training, and additional plants will come in the future.

I just wanted to take a minute to brag on the Corpus crew – all of our ministries are doing great and lots of people are coming to know the Lord. They’ve had a whole slew of baptism in the past couple of years in Texas along with some really well put together campus events that have gotten very large percentages of the student body involved. The administration at A & M Corpus have noticed how effective Clint & Kelsey’s work has been, and this award is indicative of their good leadership.

To the Hills and everyone else at the Grace Fellowship Church – great job, and keep up the good work!

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Pepperdine Bible Lectures

I’m planning to attend the Pepperdine Bible Lectures next week, and am bringing quite a few people with me.

In addition to my wife and two children my parents are making the trek to Malibu for the first time, as are my good friends Gary and Zoe Lambrecht, James Holston, and Nathaniel Tuliao – all first timers.

Last year was my first time to attend (regular readers may remember I posted notes online). I came away impressed with the program, and have since talked it up to quite a few people.

I’m pleased to see Jonathan Storment is a featured speaker this year, and am also pleased that Tyler Ellis has been invited to teach a class on campus ministry (I bragged on Tyler a few days ago in this post). Both are young ministers my age whom I respect and believe the church at large could learn a lot from (view the complete lecture schedule here).

I’m also looking forward to Tim Spivey’s classes on reviving and maintaining healthy growing churches. His blog series on church revitalization was excellent – I’m sure his classes on the subject will be as well.

Who else is planning to go?

If you can’t make it in 2010, you ought to put it on your calendar for 2011. This is a quality event.

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