The Centurion Law Enforcement
FCPO Newsletter and Bible Study
The "thin blue line" covered by the blood of Christ.
Fellow  Sheepdogs  & Supporters:

This week's newsletter and police-focused Bible study comes to you as we get ready for our annual "call for service" to our own in DC during National Police Week 2017. Note that because I will be doing what we do in DC, next week's newsletter (to include a report on our our outreach efforts), is likely to be delayed.  That said, I will be posting some on Facebook as time permits...stay tuned. Regardless, please PRAY for our team as we carry out this God-commanded "call for service" and "cover" ( backup) to our own.

Speaking of these newsletters and Bible studies, did you miss last week's edition? Need to access a prior one for reference? I always re-post them on our  Facebook , Twitter  feeds (and our website as well). Here again is When God Closes Doors.  

On the metro Denver front, our FCPO-Aurora chapter is set to meet for "cop church" this Thursday (tonight). I'll share a short preview of our Police Week mission and Officer Matt Springer will be sharing a special message with us.  7 PM, Calvary Aurora, High School Room...bring your spouse, invite a colleague and join us.  

Finally, please take a moment to review the new  prayer requests  (you are always encouraged to send me yours for posting here...of if you just need prayer in general), new  resources  and the 411 about relevant  upcoming events around the country.


MC



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RESOURCES

While on the subject of " spiritual backup," this new offering from pastor and former police chief and chaplain, Dr. Joel Shults, is a great resource:   Forward I Go: Encouragement for the Blue Line Warrior. Great "cover."


PRAYER REQUESTS
 
(1)  We covet (the righteous kind) your prayers reference our FCPO outreach to our own in DC during Police Week 2017.  

(2) Please pray for wounded Denver Officer John Adsit who is being forced into a medical retirement after 25 surgeries stemming from his line of duty injuries.  See Adsit Strong for more.  


Have a prayer request or announcement you would like included here? Need prayer?   Email me !  I also post prayer requests on my Facebook page ("friend" me).  


UPCOMING EVENTS

(1) Here's the  Police Week 2017 Schedule .  In addition, our RISE colleagues will be hosting a night of prayer and worship on Friday, May 12: RISE Night of Worship Honoring Law Enforcement .  If you're in DC, find us in FOP Tent City!

(2) Cop's wife Heidi Hogan and Badge of Hope Ministries are hosting the 3rd Annual Badge of Hope Law Enforcement "Mind and Marriage" Seminar this coming July 22nd in Lenexa, KS.  The keynote speakers will be my dear friends Lt. Col. Dave Grossman and Chaplain/Marine, Jim Bontrager.  

(3) 2017-2018 Sheepdog Seminars Schedule (recommended)

(4) The 2017 Breaching the Barricade Law Enforcement Conference and National Peace Officer Appreciation Day events are set for October 6 and 7 in Elkhart, IN. This year's outstanding lineup of speakers are J. Warner Wallace, Stacy and Martha Ettel, Brent and Vicki Newman, and Kristi Neace. Contact Jim Bontrager at [email protected] for more info.



The Centurion Law Enforcement Ministry

The Centurion Law Enforcement Ministry is a FCPO-affiliated, evangelical Christian outreach to our own in law enforcement. These newsletters and Bible studies are part of this effort and past editions can be found on our website and on social media  ( Facebook and Twitter ) pages. Feel free to adapt these messages for your own individual or group use and please share them with others. 

In addition, I regularly speak at both law enforcement and civilian conferences and events around the country -- please shoot me an email if I can be of service to your church, agency or organization.  
 
Fellowship of Christian Peace Officers
FCPO-USA exists to provide biblical support ("backup"), accountability and iron sharpens iron fellowship to Christian officers first in the U.S. and throughout the world as well. My chapter -- FCPO #217/-((FCPO Metro Denver and Aurora), typically meets every 2nd and 4th Thursday at Calvary Aurora (High School Room, 7 PM) for "cop church" Bible study, prayer and servant-warrior fellowship . Spouses are both welcome and encouraged to attend with their LEO! Our next meeting is set for TONIGHT (Thursday, May 11th). 

Information on the other FCPO chapters meeting around the country (including the new chapter here in Arvada, CO) can be found on the Chapter Locator pages on the FCPO-USA website.

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Spiritual Backup and Police Week 2017

Matthew 28:19-20 
 
"Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age."

 
As I write this, we're gearing up for our annual Police Week mission in Washington, DC. "Mission" you ask?  As always, what I'm about to say here is wholly biblical (God's inerrant Word) and wholly true. Sadly, that truth will be an " offense" to those who choose to believe anything other than God's Truth ( 1 Corinthians 1:18, John 14:6). Regardless, my call is to continually provide life-saving spiritual backup by sharing His truth in love without compromise ( 1 Corinthians 1:23).

Part of God's truth, of course, is ours (law enforcement) is a true mission field: the great majority of those serving in our God-ordained profession do so without a genuine, saving faith in Christ. Instead, a great many continue to hold to a false and potentially fatal (the eternal kind) belief that we "deserve" or can "earn" heaven by our service in law enforcement -- that we are somehow able to "badge" our way into heaven (and out of hell).  God, of course, says a very emphatic "NO" to all that. Clearly then, ours is a mission field and God has called EVERY true believer to "mission" work (reaching the lost with the Gospel of Christ) of some kind or other. Now while that call might not be in some far away "jungle," African missionary Charl van Wyk, correctly wrote that God's c ommands for all believers to minister (serve) others are just that -- COMMANDS -- and not mere suggestions.  Consider just the following: 

(1) We are commanded in Scripture to be the "salt and light" (Matthew 5:13-16). We are told that "faith without works is dead" (James 2:14-26 -- again, we are saved FOR works, but not BY works).

(2) We've been ordered to "preach the Gospel" (Mark 16:15) and "disciple the nations" (Matthew 28:16-20).

(3) We are not to "close our hearts to a brother in need" (John 3:17-18).

I will never forget a conversation I had with a fellow officer who claimed Christ as Savior (?) but adamantly refused to tell anyone else about Him. In other words, he refused to provide life-saving backup in open defiance of God Himself! Imagine that for a moment: would any of us refuse to run Code (lights and siren) to provide backup to a fellow officer calling for help? Or to backup an officer you see in trouble? Yet so many who call themselves "Christian" refuse to provide backup (cover) in sharing the hope we have in Christ with others.  

A quote I often share is this from missionary J.T. Studd: "Some want to live within the sound of church or chapel bell; I want to run a rescue shop within a yard of hell." It is in fact a very real description of the kind of mission work we'll be doing in DC during Police Week. Praise God, we all don't have to go on a missionary journey to provide spiritual backup to others. On the contrary, we must simply be willing to live our faith "out loud" while asking God to give us "Divine appointments" to  boldly share the hope we have in Christ with others!  

Accordingly, I am again led to share two items of spiritual backup with you: (1) a message given by my friend and fellow officer, Travis Yates (also the Editor of Law Officer Magazine) who shares my "Code 3" sense of urgency to provide spiritual backup; and (2) the testimony of slain Det. Vicky Armel whose place on our wall I will again visit this weekend. Read on!

Travis wrote:  
Modern evangelism methods have convinced many Christians that spiritual conversations with unbelievers are to be entered into slowly and cautiously while avoiding, at all cost, offending the sensibilities and sensitivities of the unbeliever. Subjects such as sin, judgment, and hell are rarely spoken of, and many Christians, if they do share their faith, believe that they must have the permission of the person with whom they are going to speak, before talking to them about Jesus Christ. 

When it comes to evangelism, one thing that is lacking in the thinking and practice of many Christians these days is a sense of urgency. The message of God's pending judgment, and His amazing grace for those who repent of their sin and put their trust in Jesus Christ alone for their salvation, is an urgent message. The message is an urgent one because it has been appointed once for a person to die ( Hebrews 9:27), with each person having no idea when his or her day will come. The message is urgent because, as Christians, we should share the loving heart of God whose desire is for none to perish but that all should come to repentance ( 2 Peter 3:9). 

The police officer continually operates with a sense of urgency. The man or woman who dons the gun and badge realizes that any given call, traffic stop, or contact could be his or her last. In addition to this ever-present stress is the reality that during any given shift an officer may have to save a life, or take a life. The police officer daily faces the real possibility of dealing with emotional and physical trauma, tragedy, and death. The worldview of the Christian officer should be such that he or she recognizes the spiritual component of every aspect of the job-none more important than the responsibility to bring the truth of the Law and the gospel to lost people, whenever the Lord provides the opportunity. These are urgent times, and this is the day of salvation ( Isaiah 49:8; 2 Corinthians 6:2). 

The Question 

So, when should we share the Law and the gospel with people? Should we wait until we feel led by the Holy Spirit before we talk to people about the consequences of breaking God's Law and their only hope for escaping the wrath to come? I say no. I do not believe Scripture supports it. I believe Scripture supports the premise that the born again follower of Jesus Christ is always led by the Holy Spirit to live a life pleasing to the Lord, which includes engaging in evangelism, because Scripture commands every Christian to be engaged in evangelism ( Matthew 28:18-20; Mark 16:15; Acts 1:8). Some would argue that these Great Commission passages were directed specifically to the apostles and are not to be applied to every Christian today. If that were the case, then Christianity would have died by the end of the First Century, along with the apostles. 

The Holy Spirit's leading will never contradict His Word. And nowhere in Scripture are we told that we shouldn't engage in evangelism. Therefore, the determining factor in one's decisions regarding evangelism should not be one's subjective feelings, but one's obedience to the Word of God. 

The Holy Spirit is God (the Third Person of the Trinity) and should be believed as such, worshiped as such, and obeyed as such. But does the Bible teach that we should only engage in evangelism when we sense or feel the leading of the Holy Spirit? 

"Led By The Spirit" 

There are only two New Testament passages of Scripture in which the phrase " led by the Spirit" or " led by the Spirit of God" appears. They are  Romans 8:12-17 and  Galatians 5:16-18:
" So then, brethren, we are under obligation, not to the flesh--for if you are living according to the flesh, you must die; but if by the Spirit you are putting to death the deeds of the body, you will live. For all who are being  led by the Spirit of God, these are the sons of God. For you have not received a spirit of slavery leading to fear again, but you have received a spirit of adoption as sons by which we cry out, 'Abba! Father!' The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him so that we may also be glorified with Him" ( Romans 8:12-17, emphasis added). 

According to the above passage of Scripture, if one is led by the Spirit, he or she understands that they have been adopted into God's family, because there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus ( Romans 8:1). 

"I say then: Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh. For the flesh lusts against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; and these are contrary to one another, so that you do not do the things that you wish. But if you are  led by the Spirit , you are not under the law" ( Galatians 5:16-18, emphasis added). 

The person who is led by the Spirit of God will behave as such (see Galatians 5:22-26). Through their righteous behavior, their holy living, and their obedience to God's Word, a Christian's life will continually reflect the Holy Spirit's leading in their life. 

Neither of the above passages speaks to following a subjective feeling about the Spirit's leading before sharing the Law and the gospel with lost people. In fact (and I agree with Pastor John MacArthur on this point), "believers are not led through subjective, mental impressions or promptings to provide direction in making life's decisions--something Scripture nowhere teaches. Instead, God's Spirit objectively leads His children sometimes through the orchestration of circumstances ( Acts 16:7), but primarily through: 
1) Illumination: divinely clarifying Scripture to make it understandable to our sinful, finite minds ( Lk. 24:44-45; 1 Cor. 2:14-16; Eph. 1:17-19; cf. Eph. 3:16-19; Col. 1:9);   
2) Sanctification: divinely enabling us to obey Scripture ( Galatians 5:16, 17; 5:25)" (MacArthur Study Bible, pp. 1707-08). 

Should We Wait To Be Asked? 

" But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts, and always be ready to give a defense to everyone who asks you a reason for the hope that is in you, with meekness and fear" ( 1 Peter 3:15). 

Some Christians believe that they should wait to be asked about Jesus Christ before they share the good news with them. With more than 90% of Christians admitting that they do not mention Jesus Christ to a single lost soul, in a year's time, apparently not too many people are asking. I have traveled throughout out country, as well as to Canada and South America in order to minister to the law enforcement family. I have visited dozens of different law enforcement agencies, spending many hours with officers in briefing rooms and patrol cars. If my belief and practice were to wait for an officer (or anyone else for that matter) to bring up the things of God, I would rarely share the gospel with anyone. And as a follower of Jesus Christ, I am not called to rarely share the gospel. 

Some of those who hold the position of not speaking about Christ until asked to do so might turn to  1 Peter 3:15 to support their position. They might emphasize the portion of the verse that speaks about giving a defense to "everyone who asks." However, this is a misinterpretation and misapplication of the verse. The emphasis of the verse is not waiting to be asked, but always being ready to defend your faith. 

There are scenes in the Bible where people approached Jesus or the apostles and asked them questions (ex.  John 3; Luke 18; Acts 16). However, none of these passages serve as a mandate for waiting to be asked before warning people about the wrath to come and presenting the gospel to them. Nowhere in Scripture are we told that we must wait to have a person's permission to speak the truth to them, in love. Nor does Scripture say we must first have a long-term relationship with a person before sharing the Law and the gospel with them. What we see in Scripture is Jesus and the apostles quickly developing a relationship with a person, by simply establishing rapport with them (ex.  John 4:7-26; Acts 8:25-40). 

While it may be helpful information, we do not need to know someone's personal history or what may be troubling them presently before we can or should share the gospel with them. The reason is that our purpose for sharing the Law and the gospel is not to help a person feel better about themselves or to promise them a solution to their current problems--which, more than likely, have been brought on by their own sinfulness. 

A Tourniquet, Not a Band-Aid 

The Law and the gospel is not a self-adhesive band-aid designed to merely cover the superficial wounds of a sinner's felt needs. It is the tourniquet that must be applied with care, firmness, and urgency to the sinner's mortal wound. For the Law and the gospel is the only thing that will stop their eternal bleeding and the death of their souls, as they are brought to repentance and faith in Jesus Christ. 

Consider the following scenario. You are a police officer who receives a call of a traffic collision, with injuries. As is sometimes the case, you arrive before fire and paramedics. You see a man on his back, in the middle of the street. He was thrown from his car, by the force of the collision. You rush to his side and see that his arm is broken and that he has a gaping wound in his chest, which is bleeding profusely. The man is in shock and is unaware of the seriousness of his condition. He can't see his chest, but he can see his arm. Still conscious, he looks up at you and screams, "Help! My arm is broken! Do something about my arm!" 

It's obvious to you that the wound in the man's chest is far more serious than his broken arm. You bend down and begin to apply direct pressure to the wound in his chest. Your hands are now covered with his blood. The man screams again that his arm is broken. You holler back at him to lie still. The man demands that you stop putting so much weight and pressure on his chest and instead get a splint and bandage for his arm. What would you do? 

Would you stop addressing the potentially mortal chest wound in order to make the man feel better about his arm? Of course you wouldn't! You have been called to protect and serve; and, under the circumstances, you are a better judge of what the wounded man needs than he is. Why? Because you see the extent of his injuries when he can't. You don't know how much time the man has left. But you do know that if you spend too much time addressing the injury to his arm he will die as a result of the chest wound. You don't want him to simply feel better. You want him to survive. 

The man continues to be uncooperative--yelling and thrashing about--because all he can think about is his arm. "Look!" You tell him. "You have a terrible wound in your chest. You are bleeding severely. If we don't get this bleeding stopped, it won't matter that you have a broken arm. You'll be dead! Now, hold still so I can help you." 

The man calms down. His arm still hurts, but he now realizes there are more important issues than his broken arm. He doesn't want to die. He understands that not only do you want to help him, but that you also know what you're doing. Instead of complaining about the pressure you are putting on his chest, he is thankful that you are trying to stop the bleeding. 

As a follower of Jesus Christ, you have received the "Code-3" call to reach the entire world with His gospel. People are dying all around you--most of them now facing eternity in hell--and you know it. In the law enforcement family, one of our brothers or sisters behind the badge sacrifices his or her life, in the line of duty, every 57 hours. 2-3 times that many commit suicide every year. They are troubled with broken relationships, work stress, alcoholism and other forms of substance abuse, and a bitterness and hardness of heart that often comes from seeing the worst of what man can do to his fellow man. Yet most of them are completely unaware that they are bleeding to death, spiritually. They are blind to the fact that once they pass from this life they will stand before a holy and righteous God who will judge them in righteousness. " And inasmuch as it is appointed for men to die once and after this comes judgment" ( Hebrews 9:27). 

Conclusion 

You have the answer--not an answer to making all of their problems in this life go away. Remember, Jesus said, " These things I have spoken to you, so that in Me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world" ( John 16:33). You have the answer (the cure) for their mortal wound--the terminal disease of sin. You know the One who has overcome the world, the One who can and will forgive their sin and grant them everlasting life--if they will turn from their sin and, by faith, trust Jesus Christ alone for their salvation. " And there is salvation in no one else; for there is no other name under heaven that has been given among men by which we must be saved" ( Acts 4:12). 

When will you tell them? Will you wait until they ask? They may never ask. Will you wait until you feel "led," when you have already been commanded by Scripture to share your faith? When you are working the streets, you don't need a supervisor to tell you before every shift to go out and make arrests. You don't need the dispatcher to come on the radio and encourage you to make a traffic stop or to contact a suspicious looking person walking down a darkened alley. You know your job. You know why you are out there. You know the law and your department's policies and procedures. You know how to talk to and treat people. You know the right thing to do. The same is true when it comes to evangelism. " Therefore, to one who knows the right thing to do and does not do it, to him it is sin" ( James 4:17). 

These are urgent times. An estimated 150,000 die every day. Thousands of people died in the time it took you to read this article. Don't wait any longer. When it comes to evangelism, you do not love people with your silence. Handle evangelism the same way you would handle a " Code-3" call with care, courage, wisdom, discernment, and authority (in the case of evangelism, the authority of Christ and His Word). If you have been saved, then you have been led to share the Law and the gospel with lost people. Now, go share your faith, while you still have time.

Find any of me in that?  Code 3 sense of urgency indeed!  

Secondly, and with both Police Week and Travis' message in mind, I again encourage you to listen and share The Vicky Armel Story. Folks, because Mo stepped out in faith to provide spiritual backup, Vicky is now with the Lord. 

So what about you?  Again, it is with this same Code 3 sense of urgency that I provide the following  spiritual backup: ONLY those who die having been first born again in Christ will escape an eternity in hell. Is that you?  If not, consider the following: 

(1) Jesus' first words in His earthly ministry were: " Repent and believe in the Good News " ( Mark 1:15 ). To repent  is a "180" -- a complete, radical change of mind and heart as it relates our sin. To believe  as God intends it to  completely and radically surrender to Him in faith  ("believe" and "faith" have the same Greek root meaning) in the same way you have faith that your body armor will stop the rounds it is designed to stop or that a skydiver's parachute will open (we stake our lives on it)! Moreover, the words repent and believe are literally two sides of the same coin in meaning and intent. 

(2) In John 3:1-21, Jesus said, "... you must be born again." Note our Lord's emphasis on must (not "may" or "should"): this is the life-saving/life-changing personal relationship (not "religion") with Christ that I stress so often. See  What does it mean to be a born again Christian
 
Then see:
(a) Take the Good Person Test  and see how you do (as shown in this study, you can't ever be "good" enough without Christ). Then go to...
(c)  Cops and Salvation (a powerful, short message from police Commander Travis Yates of Ten-Four Ministries and Law Officer Magazine ).
(d) Got saved?  Now what?

More questions? Please contact me!  

Pray for my team and I as we give spiritual backup to our own during Police Week in DC starting on Friday.

MC
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