Blog — Harvest Bible Chapel Pittsburgh North

Mark Ort

How Do We Know that the Bible is God's Word? Part 1

Elder Mark Ort has been leading a group of eager listeners about God's truth in His inerrant Word of scripture. These truths have been meticulously recorded and passed down through generations like no other book in history!

Below are the notes and audio of the first four weeks to the series that you can listen to and study on your own, as a small group, or family devotionals.

Note: Mark will be finishing up the remaining three lessons in mid-November.


2017-10-04 - The Bible - Part 1 Introduction
Mark Ort

Lesson Notes (PDF):
Introduction (Week 1)


 

2017-10-11 - The Bible - Part 2 A Unique Book
Mark Ort

Lesson Notes (PDF):
A Unique Book (Week 2)



 

2017-10-18 - HBC Discipleship - The Bible - Part 3 Historical Evidence
Mark Ort

Lesson Notes (PDF):
Historical Evidence (Week 3)



 

2017-10-25 - HBC Discipleship - The Bible - Part 4 Archaeological Evidence
Mark Ort

He Will Take Us the Rest of the Way

God Finishes What He Begins

Mark Ort - Elder
Harvest Bible Chapel Pittsburgh North Elder

When our family walked through the doors of Marshall Middle School that first time back in 2013 to worship with our soon-to-be Harvest family, we were greeted with warmth and genuineness. Our first encounter with Harvest Bible Chapel came during a cafeteria service. At the time, we didn’t know that there was normally an auditorium service on most Sundays. We left on that particular morning with the 'wow’ feeling. It was bare bones, no frills, kinda raw authentic worship... just singing to God at the top of our lungs and hearing from God through His Word, on the edge of our cafeteria table seats. No gimmicks, nothing fancy... just real. It was something that we had desired to be a part of for such long period of time.

We loved the simplicity. We loved getting to know these special people as we set up for each service. It actually felt kind of good knowing that we were ‘serving’ and that we didn’t have to worry about the maintenance of our own building. It was a pleasure to unpack boxes and set up before the service and to tear down and pack up those same boxes.

Building a Harvest Training Center in Romania

But as time passed, in the back of my mind I knew that this was a temporary thing. It wasn’t a reasonable expectation that we would be doing this forever. It reminded me so much of the children of Israel moving the tabernacle. Faithful people of God, setting up, tearing down. Setting up, tearing down. I never heard anyone at Harvest complaining about it. It was a joy to labor together.

As the weeks turned into months, I started to wonder what it would be like to have our own facility. How much more effective would we be as a church body? How many more people could we reach? How much more ministry could be done? I started to pray for a new place to worship. And I was not the only one praying!

I would drop our kids off at Covenant church next door to our rented space for youth group and head over to Panera for two hours to wait for them where I’d meet up with Mike Gates who had just dropped his kids off at the same youth group. We would sit and talk about so many of the things of our great church. We would share our dreams of maybe having our own building someday. A handful of times we would spend those 2 hours driving up and down Route 19 through Wexford, through Cranberry, through Thorn Hill Industrial Park, just looking for any possibilities. I would spend hours surfing all the local commercial real estate web sites. It didn’t look like it was going to be easy to find a suitable place for our purposes. I was praying, Mike was praying, Pastor Jeff was praying, the elders were praying... the guys from our partner church at Harvest Pittsburgh East were praying with us. I knew God was listening!

Mike Gates Facilities Leader and Mark showing off the "beard" and the "bald".

When Mike found the ‘theater room’ across from Northway church, my initial thought was ‘oh, this is too good to be true... it’s probably way too expensive’! Then when I looked at the photos on the real estate website, my next thought was ‘oh, the place looks too small’. As Christians, we are supposed to walk by faith and not by sight, but I needed to see the space with my own two eyes. Walking into the room for the first time, I once again was pummeled with doubt, thinking that the room was too small. Then, as the property manager mentioned possibly removing some glass panels that were used to create a half-round room in the middle of the theater area, it suddenly occurred to me that this room wasn’t as small as it looked. The possibilities now became endless in my mind. Turning the chairs a certain way and moving the platform made it very feasible to conduct a worship service here! By the end of our first visit to the building I was convinced that with a few tweaks this was a very workable space for the current size of our church. This impression has been confirmed by the other elders and I have not had one check in my spirit about this being the right thing to do. God is answering our prayers about a building in a big way right before our very eyes.

Sorting and packing as a church family at World Vision Pittsburgh

God has always been faithful... even when we have not been. He brought us to this point... through valleys and seeming defeat... over mountains and sure victories... and so I have every reason to believe He will take us the rest of the way. We won’t be in this new building forever, but God is putting us in it for this time in our church’s life. One of my prayers recently is that we would outgrow this space quickly! We have a great opportunity to do ministry in exciting ways that we’ve not been able to do yet. If we set the Lord before us... and fix our eyes upon him... if we jump out in faith... if we’re obedient... and trust Him for the results, we will see amazing things happen. Praise God from whom all blessings flow!

-Mark

Visit theNext3 page to stay updated on the building move and continued growth of our church to bring disciples to Christ in the North Hills of Pittsburgh.

Share

Love the Haters

God absolutely delights in using His Word to chisel away at our hardness. It amazes me that whenever I am facing a perceived trial that the words of scripture seem to leap more boldly from pages.

I have recently been put into a position where I will be dealing with some abrasive people.    You don’t need me to tell you that some people are characterized by rudeness and even hostility.  We all encounter them from time to time.  To be around miserable and nasty personalities is not something I ever asked for, but it’s where I am right now.   The condescending treatment, the harsh attitudes, the abusive speech… who needs that kind of stress?!  Wouldn’t it be great to just coast through my days without having to encounter people like this?

So then there’s God’s impeccable timing:  in my reading and meditating time just a few days ago, I came to the section in Matthew 5:43-48… a familiar passage in the Sermon on the Mount:  

“I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.”

 "If you love those who love you, what reward do you have?  Do not even the tax collectors do the same?”

“If you greet only your brothers what more are you doing than others? Do not even the Gentiles do the same?”  

Jesus’s commands in this passage tore through my heart like a tornado in trailer court. Now it’s not like I’ve ever been persecuted to the point of having my eyes gouged out or my fingers cut off.  I have never been in fear for my life by hostile people.   But loving someone who is nasty is just not something that lands at the top of my Christian to-do list.  This group of verses, at least from my perspective, is some of the hardest of the Lord’s expectations of us.  Jesus says to love them. "Seriously?! You want me to actually ‘love’ them?"  And not some passive sort of ‘like’ or ‘tolerance’.   This love He’s talking about is a self-sacrificing, warm, caring love and concern directed toward the one that I would consider my enemy.  And it’s not a suggestion or recommendation. This is a command from Jesus Himself. A strong imperative! That is sooooo totally antithetical to every fleshly cell in my body.  With every ounce of strength in my being, I want to do the opposite.  "Can’t I just defend my honor and be snarky and sarcastic?  I have dignity, you know! Nobody is going to treat me like that!”  

But instead, in this greatest sermon ever preached, Jesus says I am to love my enemies the way God loves them.  He extends His kindness to everyone by giving sunshine and rain to the righteous and to the evil at the same time. Why? Because He loves them.  

It is the way of Jesus that His followers would be distinct… and it is our love for our enemies that makes us distinct.  Who does such a thing?  While everyone else may respond harshly to abrasiveness, true believers will be the ones who respond with love.  And not only that, but we will be the ones wearing out the knees in our favorite jeans, on the floor in serious prayer.  

As I thought through these verses in a new and fresh way, the twisted metal of my hard-heartedness toward those who need Christ lie piled up in a heap as I asked God for strength to make me a brighter light in the darkness.  May the Lord forgive my negligence in praying for these people and give me a renewed vigor to beseech Him on their behalf.   As committed believers and as a church, may these soul-and-spirit-piercing passages awaken us all from our slumber to be in fervent prayer for those in need of salvation.   Prayer changes us.  When the content of our prayers relates to how we respond to the haters, God will implant within us a capacity to love those who are difficult to love.  Genuine love has a way of building a strong platform from where we will be heard.   From an earthly standpoint, effectively sharing the gospel depends on this (speaking the truth in love).  Nobody ever said that loving difficult people was going to be easy… but God has given us His Spirit… and His Spirit gives us the strength to do hard things.

May God grant you many blessings,

Mark

Share

An Unshakeable 'Know-So' Faith

A couple weeks ago, I met an 80-year old fellow with a grey shaggy beard who shared a room at the hospital with my father for a couple days.  He was quite an individual with no shortage of colorful vocabulary and interesting stories.  

I walked into his hospital room about ten minutes after he had gotten the worst news of his life.  Nearing the room, I could hear him apologizing profusely to the nurse for having exploded into a fit of rage just moments earlier.   Apparently the staff was gently trying to break the news to this man that he was dying from liver cancer, but they didn't quite know how to make it palatable for him.  The outlook for Skip was very grave, and they were beating around the bush which upset him exceedingly. "All I want is for people to be straight with me!", he exclaimed with passion.  "I just want the truth!"   

You gotta respect a man who just wants the truth, right?  And so, being a 'truth' guy myself, I saw this as a wide open door to ask him some pointed questions about eternity.   He had just gotten some really horrible news and he was all alone.  No family, no friends.  No one to walk with him upon hearing that his life probably was nearing the end.  "Well, I guess this is it", he mumbled in defeat.  "This is how it all ends".   

I asked him if he ever gave thought to what’s next for him when he dies.  “What about the after-life, Skip?  You ever think about that?”.   “Oh, yeah!”, he shot back, sort of excitedly.  

In our discussion, he told me he had been sober for forty years. He didn’t really participate much in his ‘religion’, but tried to live a clean life.  He was very hopeful that since he was a decent guy, maybe God would let him into heaven. 

“Skip, you don’t have to wonder if you are going to heaven.  You can actually know for sure. The Bible gives people assurance of eternal life”.  I walked him through the gospel message, starting with the grim reality that all of us are sinners, separated from God and helpless to do anything about it on our own (Isa. 59:2, Rom. 3:23).  “Because of our sin”, I told him, “we are all condemned to spend an eternal, conscious punishment in a real place called hell.  God is a just and righteous judge, requiring payment for sins.  He wouldn’t be much of a judge if He just winked at sin and let people off the hook, would He?  Consequently, God’s justice demands that our sin be paid for (Rom. 6:23)”.   

“God, in his infinite love and grace however, provided a way of escape, sending Jesus Christ to the cross as the all-sufficient payment for every one of the sins of those who surrender their lives to God’s Son”.   I told him that this is called ‘salvation’, which is really just another term for ‘deliverance’.  I continued: “Skip, deliverance means that you were once in a position of danger, and now you have been moved to a position of safety... you have been saved!  Jesus Christ provides deliverance to those who put their faith, hope and trust in His finished work on the cross.  Skip, you and I both belonged on that cross, but Jesus took our place - he was our substitute.  Christ’s work on the cross is His offer to take ALL your sins upon himself (2 Cor. 5:21).  The free gift of eternal life is there for your taking.  He offers to make you completely clean, just as if you never sinned.  And even so much more than that, He offers to place His righteousness upon you.  Do you know what that means Skip?  That means that you become an adopted and forgiven child of God (Eph. 1:5).  When God looks at you, He sees you as He sees His own Son, completely blameless!  That is amazing!”   

“But Skip, this requires a response on your part.  To receive this amazing gift of forgiveness and eternal life, you must reach out to God in faith and accept the gift of His Son, and renounce all your own efforts and so-called good works (Eph. 2:8-9).  You must confess that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, and you will be saved (Rom. 10:9-10)”.   

“You see Skip, Christians don’t have a flimsy ‘hope-so’ outlook.  We don’t have a nervous ‘think-so’ attitude.  We don’t have a questionable ‘maybe-so’ thought process.  Because of God’s special promises in His Word, we have an unshakable ‘know-so’ faith.  And that faith can be yours!” 

I followed up with Skip the next day by giving him a gospel tract that reinforced everything I had told him.  We prayed together a couple times, and he thanked me for talking with him, but only the Lord knows where Skip’s heart really is.  Pray for his salvation! 

Blessings to you as you share the hope of the gospel in your area of influence,

Mark

Share