Wednesday, February 04, 2026
Concentric circles
Concentric circles of Concern
Person X may be in the high crime streets of a big city or in a third world, or in a poverty-stricken country, or in a rescue mission, or a jail— SO, WE go to them! We evangelize. We come home. We tell others about our efforts. We go back to our business, job, home, church, and/or daily routines; and every so often we repeat the cycle.
HOWEVER, WHY is it that all too often
We do not GO TO
THE FOLKS, close to us, IN CIRCLES 2 - 6?
[1] IT COULD BE because they know us! They know our salty language, lustful looks, greedy grasping, anger, business deceit, gossip, etc. They see how we are at work or at school or in our home. THUS: We might need to, first of all, ask for their forgiveness or give forgiveness— which if that is what we need to do— just do it! That is powerful witnessing!
[2] ANOTHER REALITY: With Person X, we don't have to deal with our 'hang-ups' … OR THEIRS … and we can 'love them and leave them!'
EVEN with 'Third World' type missions/evangelism right in our own town, or with outreach efforts toward neighbors just down the street— it's different and often far more difficult!
[3] AND ALSO, with ministry in Circles 2-6 — it's week after week, month after month, year after year. Ministering to those in Circles 2-6 is much like the ministry of the career missionary. We are there for the long haul— planting, watering, praying, and waiting for the LORD to give the increase! We can't leave them! We can't just do Sunday School… or Youth or Children's ministry… or ministry to a neighbor… or to a co-worker once or twice a year. Rather, we MUST minister to them week after week and year after year— or at least maintain availability to minister, being alert for the next opportunity… as we continue to pray and agonize for their souls! REALITY: To folks in our Circles 2-6, we are THEIR career missionaries! We are their full-time Ministers. SADLY: this is why many folk are looking for a church to merely attend; and not one where they will be equipped and called upon to labor for the Master!
IN OUR 'CIRCLES 2-6, we MAY have to stop and give sacrificially of ourselves and our time… you know… just like the Good Samaritan! HAVE WE SERIOUSLY CONSIDERED THIS— if we find an 'open door' with a family, with an individual— do we not have to be prepared to follow-up week after week and even beyond?
If at Sunday School or at Church services, we discover a need someone has ... Be it a member or a visitor ... — doesn't the Sunday School class, (or you as a member), have opportunity/responsibility for follow-up ministry?
Over the years a good number of dear ones have told me that they feel that it is much easier to minister the Gospel in this particular foreign land or that one. It could be. But here is some larger reality: If we were the actual ones living in and ministering in that 'third world' country; or ministering in a big city Rescue Mission every day, 365 days a year and year after year— we would not think it easy; and we would see and experience the intense spiritual blindness and warfare in those mission fields!
Years back I had spent 2 weeks, 1 month, and then 45 days in India. All of those dear folks were my Person X! But all who were Person X to me— those same folk were the people of Circles 2-6 to the Indian pastors and gospel workers— 365 days a year. They did not get to LEAVE after 45 days and, thus, get out from under the daily load of evangelizing / discipling folks in Circles 2-6!
On three different occasions I, along with others, walked the streets of major cities in India, passing out tracts and doing street preaching. In years past, a number of our folk have done good ministry in Mexico, or at the Jail, or Rescue Mission. These are all ministries to our Person X group. Praise the LORD! But our 'Person X' group is the Rescue Mission's workers' or India's pastors' and churches' and/or the Mexico pastor's and their Christian worker's Person 2-6 Group! MOST OF THE REAL WORK IS DONE IN THE 2-6 GROUPS, BY THE CHRISTIAN WORKERS WHO LIVE IN THEIR MIDST, YEAR AROUND!
Yes, we can have a valid ministry to Person X, especially IF or when we leave them connected to local churches and ministries. But as any farmer knows— he must do more than scatter a bunch of seed and then leave town! FRANKLY, whatever we do among Person X is a 'piece of cake!' … when compared to the labor required from the native pastors or from the Rescue Mission Staff!...
[BY THE WAY: THIS REALITY SHOULD ENVISION OUR PRAYING FOR MISSIONARIES and NATIVE PASTORS, ETC.
BUT, again, the PRIMARY QUESTION for us is— WHO IS GOING TO TAKE THE GOSPEL TO THOSE IN OUR '2-6' WORLD? And the answer is that I MUST! AND SO MUST YOU!
BUT: "The people in my "2 to 6" world are not responsive to the gospel!" … And, "it's so hard…" and "what if it requires me to spend time with them every week…?" WE MUST REMEMBER:
First, Many a great harvest has come after a number of apparent crop failures! Let us keep planting, watering. God will give the increase! Second, we are called to be faithful. For 100 years or more, Noah worked on building an ARK and PREACHING RIGHTEOUSNESS and living a GRACE-FILLED life BEFORE a people who would ultimately be destroyed! BUT NOAH KEPT ON PREACHING! We are, likewise, called to be faithful! Third, look in the Bible— very often God has His servants in 'gospel-hardened' places! Just ask Noah! And then remember, that Jesus says that the last days will be like the days of Noah! Fourth, beware of modeling after the apparent success methods of the entertainment oriented religious harlot! Our lost world does not need PLAY ACTING visuals! They need REAL VISUALS— Christians who genuinely love and forgive, who are manifesting joy and hope in trials and tribulations, who manifest the COMPASSION of Jesus and who are walking in holiness. Fifth, A MASTER KEY with the folks in our "2-6" world, IS THE REALITY THAT life tumbles in for all of them. They have both good and 'bad' things that happen to them. And the same things happen to saints in Christ! HOWEVER, THE LOST do not have resources to help them deal with the trials and troubles. BUT, BEING IN CHRIST, WE DO! As they WITNESS you winning the battle over bitterness, revenge, hate, fear, and resentments— the Gospel is being seen in Circles 2-6! The MUSIC of the gospel is flowing from you. You are making them 'THIRSTY' and HUNGRY for good news, for GRACE to handle life! You are REVEALING JESUS, the LIGHT of the world! Thus, when life does tumble in, we often have FRESH OPPORTUNITIES… or "points of contact" to sow seeds of kindness and love! Love is, after all, meeting real needs.
Thus, real '2-6' evangelism/missions/witnessing OFTEN starts with how I treat my wife, my family, MY CHURCH FAMILY, those closest to me, those who are neighbors, those I work around; and/or those I may casually meet in the town/county where I live.
Real '2-6' evangelism/missions/witnessing starts with being a congregation that loves, that forgives, and that seeks to live holy and pure! Real 2-6- evangelism CONTINUES as we TELL what great things God has done and is doing for us— (1) Andrew went to Peter; (2) Philip, to Nathaniel; (3) The woman at the well, back to her city; (4) Cornelius went to his household; (5) The Philippian jailer, to his household; (6) The demonic of the Gadarenes now sitting at the feet of Jesus, fully clothed and in his right mind was told by Jesus to go back to his home people and to tell them what great things the LORD had done for him! (7) AND THIS WEEK… I WILL BE GOING TO___________________?
(Some of the concepts for this article are edited from and the diagram is from Concentric Circles of Concern, by W. Oscar Thompson, Jr.)
Monday, February 02, 2026
Menzies faith
Menzies was a Presbyterian, and his Christian convictions shaped him and his social and political views profoundly. In and out of office, Menzies promoted a down-to-earth, practical faith that served the community, improved democracy, and valued unity over sectarian squabbles.
Menzies on the Bible
Bob Menzies had a great respect for Scripture, believing in its divine inspiration, its uniqueness among the great books of history, and its irreplaceable value in shaping well-rounded citizens. He was raised to read the Bible regularly, and from university onwards he made this a daily habit.
At the opening of the National Memorial Bible House in Canberra, in 1960, Menzies made the following remarks about Scripture:
"The Bible is the most remarkable repository of religious history. Frankly, I don't think that any man could regard himself as educated unless he had become familiar with the great historic stories of the Bible."
"The Bible is the repository of our faith and of our inspiration. Never out of date, always up to date, always difficult of application and therefore stimulating to thoughtful people. It is the great source of faith, and of course that is why we ought to read it… The story is there, the great history is there, the great gospel is there, the whole spirit of Christianity is there."
"If I were, as I am not, an atheist or an agnostic or some other such unhappy person, I would still take the Bible with me to a desert island for two reasons. One, that I would have a noble piece of literature to accompany me and two, because given ample opportunity to study it I might cease to be an atheist or an agnostic."
Menzies on Self-Sacrifice
Sir Robert Menzies was ahead of his time in discerning the rise of an entitlement culture. As the modern world dawned in Australia, so much talk of rights was overshadowing the fundamental duties that citizens have towards one another that make for healthy, flourishing societies. It was in this context that Menzies regularly pointed to the great Christian ethic of self-sacrifice:
"Christianity… begins its teaching by imposing on every citizen the obligation of unselfishness, of thinking of the interests of his neighbour before his own, and regarding himself as his brother's keeper."
"This capacity for sacrifice, this capacity for preferring other people to oneself, this capacity for saying, I will contribute all if it is for the good of the country, exhibited so frequently in war is a God-like quality. The capacity for sacrifice, the whole idea of sacrifice is at the very root of the Christian faith."
"All things that our Faith stands for — quiet living and human kindness, the freedom of the soul, justice to our neighbours, the essential brotherhood of man, are today challenged and nothing less than our best can save them from eclipse."
Menzies on Spiritual Man
One of the great challenges facing Australian society during the Menzies years was a growing attraction towards materialist worldviews that saw humans as mere machines or animals.
Perceiving where this kind of thinking could lead, Menzies warned against it — but he never encouraged people to neglect the material world. Rather, he pointed to the spiritual realities that give meaning and purpose to our physical world:
"If ever man has set up a golden calf to worship, it is in the last forty-years or so, when he has been worshipping at the shrine of his own diabolical cleverness, and because he has become so great a worshipper of the material, the world has been rocked into such ruinous disaster."
"Democracy is more than a machine; it is a spirit. It is based upon the Christian conception that there is in every human soul a spark of the divine; that, with all their inequalities of mind and body, the soul of men stand equal in the sight of God."
"Nobody can suppose that we are educating our children, except for disaster, by turning them out of purely secular establishments at the age of fourteen, fifteen or sixteen years, merely educated to a point at which they think there is nothing left for them to learn, aggressively conscious of what they suppose to be their rights, and oblivious of that penetrating feeling of moral obligation to others, which alone can make a community of men successful."
"Human nature is at its greatest when it combines dependence upon God with independence of man."
Menzies on the Spectre of Tyranny
Materialism was not just threatening Australian society from within. It had also inspired diabolical ideas on the European continent that ended up dragging our young democracy into a second global conflict.
To successfully confront these evils, Menzies understood that a well-equipped military was not enough: we would need moral courage and character that can only flow from a belief that humans are spiritual creatures of irreplaceable value:
"While Fascists and Nazis concentrate their efforts upon the power of the State, regarding the citizen as the mere minister to that power, democrats must concern themselves with what they see to be the true end and final justification of the State; the chief end of the State becomes man — man the individual, man the immortal spirit."
"All war, and this one in particular, is a horrible and destructive thing, and demonstrates nothing so much as the truth that spiritual civilisation has lagged far behind material civilisation; that clever mechanics may yet have savage hearts; that a great reformation in human character must be the vital element in the keeping of the world's peace; and that great reformations proceed by slow changes step by step and not by decree."
"It is only that democracy which sees the superb spiritual value of the individual man which can really win a crusade against tyranny and force, and lead the way into a better world."
Menzies on Faith and Politics
Today people promote the "separation of church and state" and a secular public square. Those ideas go back to the founding of Australia, but Menzies wouldn't recognise them in their current form. For him, as indeed for Australia's founders, secularism was about making sure no particular denomination was favoured by the government. But that faith and religion should influence the political landscape of Australia was an absolute given:
"I don't think we ought to be seeking to express Christianity in party political terms, but I am perfectly certain that it's the duty of all of us to examine our own politics in Christian terms."
"We should all in a country like this, constantly test our politics, constantly try our political faith by seeing that we express it in Christian terms, but that doesn't mean that we can't disagree about politics. That doesn't mean that to be a good Christian you have to be a good Liberal or a good Country Party man, or a good Labor man. I'm saying exactly the opposite. To be a good Liberal, to be a good Labor man, to be a good Country Party man, you will be all the better if you are a Christian."
"In my father's house there are many mansions. Don't forget it. There is room in every political party for Christian men and women of all schools of Christian thought."
Menzies on Religious Freedom
For Menzies, what marked a civilisation was the freedom and tolerance it extended to its citizens. Freedom to worship and believe according to one's conscience was of paramount importance to Menzies, who laboured to heal Australia's Catholic-Protestant divide and who had a special affection for the Jewish community. In a time of rapid modernisation and violent conflict, Menzies elevated the vital importance of religious freedom:
"It is grimly significant that the century which has seen the greatest scientific advancements of recorded history has been, more than perhaps any other, disfigured, not only by wars of a stupendous range and intensity and destruction, but by widespread attacks upon the religion of love by organised hatreds and cruelties of the most barbarous kind."
"The religious freedom for which the Scottish Covenanters fought was freedom for all, Catholic or Protestant, Jew or Gentile, and to deny it was to go back to the dark ages of man. Religious persecution was the denial of freedom. Freedom of worship is the victorious enemy of persecution."
"That just as freedom is not easily beaten out of the heart of man, so is faith not easily beaten out of him. You cannot take thousands, millions, hundreds of millions of people who have a faith of their own, and destroy it, merely by order or command."
Menzies on Jesus Christ
According to historian and political theorist Stephen Chavura, Menzies' "Christianity was sincere, but like many of his generation leading up to the rapid secularisation of the 1950s and 1960s, probably more ethical than devotional."
Even so, he had a faith that was unshakeable, life-defining, and centred on one man:
"The one man, for he was human as well as divine, whose memory holds no blemish, whose influence has grown for nearly two thousand years, whose birthday is the occasion for rejoicing for hundreds of millions of men and women, was and is Jesus Christ."
Saturday, January 31, 2026
Phil 1c
Friday, January 30, 2026
Philippians 1:27-30 Stand Struggle Strong
Some Christians live protesting everything the government does.
Right said Fred. They can be known for what they are against not what they are for.
Some are set for the defence of the gospel brandishing fighting words antagonistically over anything not within their small doctrinal world.
Christian nationalism is a term young men throw around and fight over as though they are the first to wrestle with what it means to live as a Christian in a hostile world.
The Apostle Paul wrestled with what it meant to be a Christian imprisoned by a hostile government. And worse yet, some Christians were happy he was in jail and wanted to kick him while he was down!
Live worthy of the gospel of Christ.
Gospel centred living in a crazy politicised world. Just like Rome and Phillipi its colony.
Politeusthai citizens. Only here in NT.
Col 1:13.
We are citizens of heaven
Ambassadors of heaven.
Are you ashamed of your heritage ?
Do you live unashamedly speaking of Jesus ?
Ashamed of Jesus … hymn.
Make the gospel not an ideology nor a political party the main thing.
Acts 5:41
(1Cor 16:8,9) ie John Knox. Funeral "here lies one who never feared the face of man." Matt 10:28
Don't be intimidated
A mortal man ashamed of Thee?
Ashamed of Thee, whom angels praise,
Whose glories shine through endless days?
2. Ashamed of Jesus? Sooner far
Let evening blush to own a star.
He sheds the beams of light divine
O'er this benighted soul of mine.
3. Ashamed of Jesus? Just as soon
Let midnight be ashamed of noon.
'Tis midnight with my soul till He,
Bright Morning Star, bids darkness flee.
4. Ashamed of Jesus, that dear Friend
On whom my hopes of heaven depend?
No; when I blush, be this my shame,
That I no more revere His name.
5. Ashamed of Jesus? Yes, I may
When I've no guilt to wash away,
No tear to wipe, no joy to crave,
No fears to quell, no soul to save.
6. Till then--nor is the boasting vain--
Till then I boast a Savior slain.
And oh, may this my portion be,
That Christ is not ashamed of me!
1. Lord, it belongs not to my care
Whether I die or live;
To love and serve You is my share,
And this Your grace must give.
2. If life be long, I will be glad,
That I may long obey;
If life be short, should I be sad
to rise to endless day?
3. Christ leads me thru' no darker room
Than He went thru' before;
He who into God's Kingdom comes
Must enter by this door.
4. Come, Lord, when grace has made me meet
Your blessed face to see,
For if Your work on Earth be sweet,
What will Your glory be?
5. Then I shall end my sad complaints
And weary, sinful days,
And join with those triumphant saints
Who sing Jehovah's praise.
6. My knowledge of that life is small;
The eye of faith is dim,
But it's enough that Christ knows all,
And I shall be with Him. (RCH 549
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Trouble
Inwardly, David addresses his heart's purpose. Psalm 103:1-5 reads, "Bless the Lord, O my soul; And all that is within me, bless His holy name! Bless the Lord, O my soul, And forget not all His benefits: Who forgives all your iniquities, Who heals all your diseases, Who redeems your life from destruction, Who crowns you with lovingkindness and tender mercies, Who satisfies your mouth with good things, So that your youth is renewed like the eagle's." This reveals the heart of "a man after [God's] own heart" (Acts 13:22).
Outwardly, David addresses his Hebrew people. Psalm 103:6-18 reads, "The Lord executes righteousness And justice for all who are oppressed. He made known His ways to Moses, His acts to the children of Israel. The Lord is merciful and gracious, Slow to anger, and abounding in mercy. He will not always strive with us, Nor will He keep His anger forever. He has not dealt with us according to our sins, Nor punished us according to our iniquities. For as the heavens are high above the earth, So great is His mercy toward those who fear Him; As far as the east is from the west, So far has He removed our transgressions from us. As a father pities his children, So the Lord pities those who fear Him. For He knows our frame; He remembers that we are dust. As for man, his days are like grass; As a flower of the field, so he flourishes. For the wind passes over it, and it is gone, And its place remembers it no more. But the mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting On those who fear Him, And His righteousness to children's children, To such as keep His covenant, And to those who remember His commandments to do them." How great are the Lord's mercies!
Upwardly, David addresses his heavenly partners. Psalm 103:19-22 reads, "The Lord has established His throne in heaven, And His kingdom rules over all. Bless the Lord, you His angels, Who excel in strength, who do His word, Heeding the voice of His word. Bless the Lord, all you His hosts, You ministers of His, who do His pleasure. Bless the Lord, all His works, In all places of His dominion." Angels are heavenly partners, an angel told John, "I am your fellow servant" (Revelation 19:10, 22:9). Someone explains, "Because the Lord's dominion includes both heaven and earth, it is appropriate that all His created beings and objects praise Him."
As you reflect on the Lord's purpose, plan, and power, remember it is "not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us" (Titus 3:5a).
Alan Redpath, Victorious Christian Living: Studies in the Book of Joshua
Oh, for a faith that will not shrink
Though pressed by many a foe,
That will not tremble on the brink
Of poverty or woe:
2. It will not murmur nor complain
Beneath the chast'ning rod,
But in the hour of grief or pain
Can lean upon its God:
3. A faith that shines more bright and clear
When tempests rage without,
That, when in danger, knows no fear;
In darkness feels no doubt.
4. A faith that keeps the narrow way
Till life's last spark is fled,
And with a pure and heav'nly ray
Lights up a dying bed.
5. Lord, give me such a faith as this,
And then, whate'er may come,
I taste e'en now the hallowed bliss
Of an eternal home.
Friday, January 23, 2026
To adapt into my sermon points from yesterday.
Arthur T. Pierson explains in The Acts of the Holy Spirit: "When disciples have a true revival, society gets a revolution. When the Spirit moves mightily upon children of God we may look for other mighty movements among unbelievers, and need not be surprised if the devil himself comes down, having great wrath, as though he knew that his time were short." Acts 19:23 reads, "And about that time there arose a great commotion about the Way." This happened as those of the Way carried out the Great Commission of the Lord Jesus Christ recorded in the four gospels and the book of Acts. Note three scenes in this segment of the life and ministry of the apostle Paul.
First, he is in the line of sacred duty (Acts 19:21-27). Paul was in Ephesus at this time on his third missionary journey, where a silversmith named Demetrius who made shrines to Diana felt his livelihood threatened by the progress of the gospel. Many people "turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God" (1 Thessalonians 1:9b). Demetrius called together others who also greatly profited from this craft, thus stirring up "a great commotion about the Way" (Acts 19:23b). In the line of sacred duty, it is good to remember as Adrian Rogers said, "The doors of opportunity swing on the hinges of opposition." Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 16:8-9, "But I will tarry in Ephesus until Pentecost. For a great and effective door has opened to me, and there are many adversaries."
Second, he is in the face of serious danger (Acts 19:28-34). A riot ensued as instigated by the speech of Dimetrius. Some of Paul's travel companions, Gaius and Aristarchus, were seized by the angry mob. Paul wanted to clear up the confusion, but some of his friends serving as Asian officials persuaded him not to go into the theater. A man named Alexander was put forward by the Jews to address the angry assembly, no doubt to keep them out of trouble since they did not participate in the idolatry. When they discovered he was a Jew, they cried out "with one voice for about two hours, 'Great is Diana of the Ephesians!'" (Acts 19:34). No wonder Paul writes, "I have fought with beasts at Ephesus" in 1 Corinthians 15:32.
Third, he is in the arms of sweet deliverance (Acts 19:35-41). Paul was protected by the short speech of a city clerk who was like a mayor in our day. He simply reminded the crowd that the Romans would not look with favor on such a disorderly assembly and there are courts and proconsuls if legitimate charges need to be filed. This calmed the crowd, and he dismissed the assembly. Paul was always quick to explain that even though there were times he despaired even of life that he trusted in God for His deliverance (2 Corinthians 1:8-10).
Let's faithfully follow and fulfill our Lord's Great Commission!
Dr. Franklin L. Kirksey, Author of Don't Miss the Revival! Messages for Revival and Spiritual Awakening from Isaiah and
Sound Biblical Preaching: Giving the Bible a Voice [Both available on Logos and Amazon]
January 15, 2024 ©
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Stand by me
Oh, for a faith that will not shrink
Though pressed by many a foe,
That will not tremble on the brink
Of poverty or woe:
2. It will not murmur nor complain
Beneath the chast'ning rod,
But in the hour of grief or pain
Can lean upon its God:
3. A faith that shines more bright and clear
When tempests rage without,
That, when in danger, knows no fear;
In darkness feels no doubt.
4. A faith that keeps the narrow way
Till life's last spark is fled,
And with a pure and heav'nly ray
Lights up a dying bed.
5. Lord, give me such a faith as this,
And then, whate'er may come,
I taste e'en now the hallowed bliss
Of an eternal home.