278. Live a Transparent Life
The Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
Release Date: 08/05/2024
The Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
How to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast. If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: Matthew Series Matthew 15:21-39 Introduction Jesus had just dealt with the topic of what was clean and what was unclean. Jesus said our heart and the words that come from out heart are what defile us, not what we eat or touch or our external environment. I hope you’ve had a good week digging a little deeper, paying attention to your words, the thoughts of your heart. Jesus goes on from that powerful...
info_outline 303. The Best of the RSP: Interview with Brian Craig. Living with a Terminal Illness.The Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
How to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast. If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: In this episode, I’m rereleasing my interview with Brian Craig, who recently passed away from brain cancer. This interview was originally released as episode 255 in March of 2024 after Brian’s diagnosis. Listen as he shares about his experience living with a terminal illness.
info_outline 302. Best of the RSP: Interview with Brian Craig from 2020 prior to Cancer DiagnosisThe Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
How to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast. If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: In this episode, I’m rereleasing my interview with Brian Craig, who recently passed away from Brain Cancer. This interview was originally recorded in July of 2020 and released as episode 25 of the Rob Skinner Podcast. This interview took place prior to his illness.
info_outline 301. Exposition of Matthew 15:1-20The Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
How to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast. If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: In this episode, I continue my exposition of the book of Matthew. Today's section discusses the authority of man versus the authority of God and what truly defiles us.
info_outline 300. Exponential West Church Planting Conference 2024, October 22-24, 2024The Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
How to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast. If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: In this episode, I’m going to give a recap of my recent trip to The Exponential Church Planting Conference held in the San Francisco Bay Area.
info_outline 299. Interview with Kolade Paul-Ajuwape, Missionary to Eastern Europe and Japan.The Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
How to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast. If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: Today, I interview Kolade Paul-Ajuwape, who is a missionary to Eastern Europe and a recent graduate of MIT. Listen as he shares about his experiences on the mission field and his dream to go to Japan. You can reach Kolade at [email protected]
info_outline 298. Pablo and Nicole Padilla, Newport Beach, California. Bi-Vocational Ministers Serving Singles Around the WorldThe Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
How to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast. If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: Today, I’m talking to Pablo and Nicole Padilla, who lead the singles in the Los Angeles Singles Ministry, a group of singles in Orange County and serve on the International Singles Service Team. They directed two conferences, most recently the North American Singles Conference in August of 2024. They do all this while holding down full time jobs. Find out how and why they do all this on The Rob Skinner Podcast. You can...
info_outline 297. Exposition of Matthew 14:13-21, The Feeding of the 5,000The Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
How to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast. If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: In this episode, I continue my exposition of the book of Matthew with Jesus' feeding of the five thousand in Matthew 14:13-21. Transcript: Introduction Pictures from Apple Annies 1. Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand, Matthew 14:13-21 13 When Jesus heard what had happened, he withdrew by boat privately to a solitary place. Hearing of this, the crowds followed him on foot from the towns. 14 When...
info_outline 296. Backpacking with Jesus and Friends on the Arizona TrailThe Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
How to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast. If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: Nick Kaplan, Evan Snow, Jacob Krell and I backpacked Arizona Trail Passage 5 this weekend. It was a 15 mile hike and we did it over two days and one night. The Arizona Trail is 800 miles long and extends from the Mexican border north to the Utah border. Listen as we share our experience walking with Jesus and one another, getting closer to God and one another. Here is the passage we backpacked:
info_outline 294. Interview with Mike Fontenot about His New Book: "Spiritual Leadership, Developing Qualities Worth Following"The Rob Skinner Podcast: Helping You Make This Life Count
How to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast. If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: Mike Fontenot has been doing the ministry since 1968. He just wrote a book about Spiritual Leadership. I read it and am going to ask him about the book and why he wrote it. You can find the book here:
info_outlineHow to Support the Rob Skinner Podcast.
If you would like to help support my mission to multiply disciples, leaders and churches, click here: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/robskinner
Live a Transparent Life, Transcript
I decided to lay it all out on the table with my Mom. I told her my whole story. All the dirt, all the secrets and everything I’d never told her before. She was lying in a hospital bed in a rehabilitation facility in Medford, Oregon. She was in her mid-90’s and would pass within a couple of years. I didn’t know at that time whether she would recover from her current illness. I was hoping she would become a Christian. So I decided it was time to “open the kimono” and share my complete conversion story. She always had treated me special as her golden boy. I knew I needed to let her know what I was really like. We went back in time together to the eighties. I shared about my sin, my immorality, my drug use, drunkenness, my selfishness, the shameful events that led me to Jesus. I shared about the broken relationships, personal failures and disappointments. After I talked for about fifteen minutes, I apologized for the raw and unedited story of my life. I said, “I’m sorry for my “R” rated story, Mom.” She said, “Honey, everyone’s got an “R” rated story.”
I don’t know what I was expecting. But when I saw how unphased and unchanged she was when I shared details about my failings, I realized how being open or transparent with our lives draws people closer to us. This is why it’s so important to be an open book as a person and especially if you want to be a multiplying disciple. Transparency is one of the most powerful human traits we can develop.
The apostle John shares about this in 1 John 1:5-10, “ This is the message we have heard from him and declare to you: God is light; in him there is no darkness at all. 6 If we claim to have fellowship with him and yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not live out the truth. 7 But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, his Son, purifies us from all sin. 8 If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. 9 If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness. 10 If we claim we have not sinned, we make him out to be a liar and his word is not in us.”
Why be Open?
Why should we work to be transparent with our strengths and weaknesses? John says first of all that we should do this because God is that way. He is light, there is no darkness in him at all. God reveals himself to us through his Word, the natural world and through Jesus himself. His nature is to reveal himself to us and invite us into his life. He doesn’t have sin to hide like we do, but he loves to open up his life to us. We need to imitate God’s character and holiness.
Secondly, if we are hiding our sin and weaknesses we’re living a lie and are not living out the truth. Jesus came to die for our sin. When we hide our sin, we are living a fictional life that isn’t real.
The third reason it’s important to be vulnerable about our failings is that when we do share vulnerably, “we have fellowship with one another.” I get the most responses from my lessons when I share a setback or mistake I’ve made. People love to hear that others have flaws as well. Transparency opens the door to real relationships.
Another massively important reason to be an open book is that Jesus’ blood “purifies us from all sin” when we walk in the light. I want Jesus’ forgiveness. The way to a continual purification is through confession and openness. I remember Ed Townsend preaching a lesson on this passage and saying, God doesn’t expect perfection, he expects honesty. What a relief! I can’t be perfect, but I certainly can be honest.
John goes on in verse eight to warn against living a self-deceived life in which we are filled lies and not the truth.
Again in verse nine, he hammers again on the power of a transparent life. When we are open and confess our sin, we receive forgiveness and purification of all unrighteousness. Not just a few of our sins, all our sins are forgiven and purified. That includes the sins before conversion and the sins of our current lives. Confession is like walking under a waterfall of purification. Everything gets cancelled, forgiven and forgotten.
The final reason John gives for living an honest life is that when we puff ourselves up and put on a front of perfection, we are making God out to be a liar. We are denying God’s word that says “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23). We are claiming that Jesus is wrong about his estimation of us when he calls us evil in Luke 11:13 and Matthew 7:11, “If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!”
How to Get Open
16 Therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective. James 5:16
There are strong reasons to live a transparent life, closer relationships with people, closer relationship with God, forgiveness, purification, a more godly character, alignment of our lives with God’s word and more. However, there are also strong reasons for not being open, fear, embarrassment, worry, pride, ego and arrogance.
Our default mode is to remain living in the darkness. You will have to make a strong decision to push past embarrassment to get into the light. Here’s how:
Find a prayer partner or spiritual friend. You need to identify at least one person that you can let down around and talk at a deeper level. This person needs to be stable, steady, spiritual and caring. This person can listen to you without freaking out. Ask God for a person to talk to. He will surface a worthy person.
Ask the awkward question. Here’s what you need to ask: “May I confess some sin to you?” This might be the toughest sentence you’ll ever pronounce and yet I’ve never had a person say no. Every person I’ve talked to made time right on the spot and was incredibly kind and respectful.
Be direct. Don’t hedge, explain or “paint the picture” about your sin. It’s easy to minimize our sin by going into a long backstory about how tired we were, how hard we’ve been working, how much we’ve been doing for God, how challenging its’ been at home with wife and kids, how tough work has been etc. We bring these things up to rationalize our diving into sin. We want to blame our circumstances for our sin but Jesus says in Mark 7:20-22 that sin is an inside job. “He went on: ‘What comes out of a person is what defiles them. For it is from within, out of a person’s heart, that evil thoughts come—sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit, lewdness, envy, slander, arrogance and folly.’” Explanation and excuses aren’t necessary. Just say it:
· I yelled at my wife yesterday.
· I looked at porn last night.
· I swore this morning
· I drank too much
While it’s important to be direct, you don’t need to go into graphic detail. Don’t make your brother or sister struggle by sharing every single thing you saw or thought. Protect the hearts of people around you. Being honest doesn’t mean giving too much information. Name the sin, name the situation and leave it at that.
When is the best time to get open? As soon as you sin. Don’t wait. Don’t allow sin to harden your heart. Don’t live in fear and embarrassment. Bring it into the light. Talk about it now. Don’t let weeks pass by without confession. Paul offers good advice when he warns against taking communion without examining ourselves first. Some churches demand confession before taking communion. The principle is solid, don’t allow a week to go by without self-examination and confession.
Where is the best place to get open with your life. Find a quiet place, free from distraction. Don’t mention it in passing. Don’t text or email your confession. You don’t want your sin to resurface on the internet later. Keep it verbal.
I’ve never felt closer to God and to people than when I’ve opened up about my life. No hiding, no pretending, just real life. I remember walking to a college devotional on the UC Berkeley campus. I was a student and a baby Christian. As I walked I talked to God about the sin I had committed that day. I still remember the feeling I felt when I realized that God loved me anyway in spite of my sin. Even though the Bible talks about this forgiveness, on that day I felt the forgiveness and love of God at the deepest level of my being. It was awesome to know I was forgiven and purified of all unrighteousness.
Practicals
· Examine yourself. What sins have you allowed to remain in the recesses of your life?
· Bring them in to the light. Call someone or next time you are in a church setting, pull someone aside and ask the most important question, “Can I confess some sin to you?”
Get specific. Get to it. Share your sin without backstory, rationalization or excusemaking.