Serving the community since 1970

Articles written by Ruben Zartman


Sorted by date  Results 1 - 16 of 16

  • Pastor's Corner: Inheritance

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Mar 27, 2024

    Receiving an inheritance was a big deal in the Old Testament. People set their hearts on entering into their inheritance, and were serious about maintaining that inheritance and passing it on to their own children. They had a great reason for that. God had promised to give them an inheritance, which we often call “the Promised Land.” We call it that just because God had promised it to them. God enacted special legislation to preserve that land as an inheritance. For instance, in order to prevent land passing from one tri...

  • Pastor's Corner: How language works

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Feb 13, 2024

    Do you remember the Amelia Bedelia books, by Peggy Parish? Amelia Bedelia works as a housekeeper, but is constantly causing disasters because she inevitably misunderstands what she is told. At one point she’s roped into a neighborhood baseball game. When she’s encouraged to steal the bases and run home, she picks up the object used to mark third base and sprints back to her house. Another time when she was told to give the chickens scraps, she took small pieces of cloth to the hencoop. Amelia Bedelia’s problem is that she a...

  • Pastor's Corner: Picking and choosing

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Jan 7, 2024

    We all exercise a right to choose what we like most. When you go to a restaurant, you might order from the menu what sounds best at the time. Maybe when eating a salad or trail mix you pass over the parts you don’t like — the croutons or the cashews or whatever. When speaking about food and similar areas, that’s reasonable, and no problem at all. If we practice that habit in other areas, though, that can be quite bad. Imagine someone who practiced picking and choosing in math. If you refuse to use the number 4, a lot of ca...

  • Pastor's Corner: Some of this, some of that

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Oct 31, 2023

    We have a lot to be thankful for. The specifics will be different for you than for me, but we live in a world that contains many wonderful things to enjoy, and blessings abound. If you take a moment to review problems you've survived and good things you enjoyed this week, I have no doubt there will be a good list of things for which you could give thanks. In [BEGIN ITAL]A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich[END ITAL] Alexander Solzhenitsyn takes the unusual tack of telling us about a good day in the gulag – a Russian p...

  • Pastor's Corner: Public or private?

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Sep 26, 2023

    Should faith be a public or a private matter? That question comes up in several contexts, but the basic answer is that faith must be both. We can illustrate that point from the practice of the Lord’s Supper. Since there are only two sacraments, the Lord invested each one with an astonishing depth and richness of meaning. In the instructions given by Paul about the Lord's Supper, it's clear that there is a strongly individual element. Each one is supposed to examine himself (1 Corinthians 11:28). The Table draws each b...

  • Pastor's Corner: 'They're so mean'

    Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Jun 11, 2023

    Every church is flawed. People have bad experiences, of one kind or another, even at healthy churches. Churches are made up of people, so this isn't a big surprise. It can be a big disappointment, or an obstacle to going back, but it shouldn't be a shock when churches have problems. A major source of problems is people. That's too big a subject for one article, though, so I'll narrow the focus substantially. Some of the difficulties churches have, and some of the bad experiences people have in churches, arise from a lack of...

  • Pastor's Corner: The story inside the Ten Commandments

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated May 6, 2023

    Many people are at least vaguely familiar with the Ten Commandments. And quite a few people know the story behind them — that God gave them to Moses on the top of Mt. Sinai. But much less familiar is the story [BEGIN ITAL]inside[END ITAL] the Ten Commandments, a story about God. Several of the commandments have backup information included in them. In other words, there’s whatever God tells us to do or not to do, but then there’s also an explanation for it. And those explanations give us some amazing chapters in God’s history....

  • Pastor's Corner: Strong disagreements

    Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Mar 25, 2023

    God's word often exposes the sins of God's people. In that way, the Bible is a tremendously honest and forthright book. Even in the case of heroes and giants in the faith, the reality of failure or unfortunate behavior is recorded. I'm thinking specifically here of Paul and Barnabas. They were old friends – Barnabas brought Paul into the church in Jerusalem (Acts 9:27). They worked together in the church in Antioch (Acts 11:25–26). They had been companions in missionary lab...

  • Pastor's Corner: Why are religions different?

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Feb 13, 2023

    Churches have a lot of things in common. But they are not all the same. There are differences as well as similarities, as anyone who has visited other churches while on vacation can verify. And if there are differences between one congregation and another, or one denomination and another, that’s even more obvious between one religion and another. If you’ve ever thought about it, it’s kind of a strange thing. We’re all human beings, after all, and we share a lot of the same interests, concerns and problems. If all religions ar...

  • Pastor's Corner: All mine

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, shafter|Updated Nov 20, 2022

    Christianity teaches a lot of amazing things: that God is triune, that God the Son became man, that our salvation was accomplished by a great exchange of Christ taking our place, to name just a few. One of the most amazing things is that God wholly gives Himself, to the Church, and to each individual believer. As it says in Psalm 63:1, O God, You are my God. Explaining this verse, Henry P. Liddon said: The word represents not a human impression, or desire, or conceit, but an aspect, a truth, a necessity of the divine nature....

  • Pastor's Corner: Changing plans

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Oct 12, 2022

    It’s always nice to be able to make and stick to plans. That isn’t always reality, though. If a flight gets canceled, we wind up making new arrangements on the go — sometimes with considerable disappointment. Since it happens to all of us, you would think people would understand. But when the Apostle Paul’s plans changed, some in Corinth took that as an opportunity to criticize him for being a fickle and unreliable person. He had said he would come to them when he passed through Macedonia (1 Cor. 16:5), but then he changed...

  • Pastor's Corner: Stop and think

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Baptist Church, Shafter|Updated Aug 28, 2022

    The book of Ecclesiastes has a number of texts that make us scratch our heads and wonder a little. To give just a few examples: “In much wisdom is much grief, and he who increases knowledge increases sorrow” (1:18). “Therefore I hated life” (2:17). “A time to hate” (3:18). “I praised the dead who were already dead, more than the living” (4:2). “Do not be overly righteous, nor be overly wise”(7:16). Statements of this puzzling kind come up so much that I’ve reached the conclusion that it’s deliberate. Ecclesiastes means to m...

  • Pastor's Corner: Faithfully facing facts

    Rev. Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Jul 25, 2022

    Although a big chunk of the book of Genesis is devoted to Abraham's life, there is a great deal we don't know. For instance, 13 years go by between the end of Chapter 16 and the first verse of Chapter 17. The history in the Bible leaves out a lot. There must be a principle of selection, a way of determining what was significant in Abraham's life for later readers. One suggestion, made by the late Noel Weeks in his book Gateway to the Old Testament, is that Genesis is highlighting the promises made to Abraham, but also how...

  • Pastor's Corner: Factoring in eternity

    Rev. Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated May 26, 2022

    The Bible is very blunt about the fact that life in this world is quite difficult. Genesis explains that Adam and Eve, by their rebellion against God brought death into the world and the necessity of hardship (Genesis 3:8–24). The book of Job illustrates that life is harsh through the story of a man, who lost everything. The reality that life is short and full of frustration is the background for everything Ecclesiastes says. And in the New Testament, the Apostle Paul takes the hardships of life for granted when he says, "For...

  • Pastor's Corner: Celebration of an unjust murder

    Rev. Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Apr 27, 2022

    Christians are against murder. After all, it's prohibited by the law of God (#6 in the Ten Commandments, Exodus 20:13). In fact, even the beginning of murder - hostility and hatred in the heart - is ruled out by the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5:22). And yet there is one murder we celebrate and give thanks for: the judicial murder or unjust execution of Jesus Christ when Pontius Pilate was Procurator of Judea for the Roman Empire. The moment I say that, of course, I have to hurry up and explain. It was not right for Jesus to...

  • Pastor's Corner: God's presence with Joseph

    Pastor Ruben Zartman, Ebenezer Reformed Church, Shafter|Updated Feb 21, 2022

    The story of the Old Testament patriarch Joseph is one of the most dramatic in the Bible. With a couple of interruptions this story runs in Genesis from chapter 37 to the end of the book (chapter 50). During that time, Joseph's brothers first planned to kill him and then decided to sell him into slavery instead. Once in Egypt he was imprisoned as a result of a false accusation. A prisoner whom he helps forgets all about him for a long time. Joseph's story for a very long time is one of undeserved suffering. However, that...