Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Gospel Centrality


A friend sent me a link to this awesome short read on the centrality of the gospel in our daily lives by Tim Keller.  Maybe you guys will also enjoy it.

http://www.redeemer2.com/resources/papers/centrality.pdf

"I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation" (Rom.1:16).

A few excerpts...

Tertullian said, "Just as Christ was crucified between two thieves, so this doctrine of justification is ever crucified between two opposite errors."

Tertullian meant that there were two basic false ways of thinking, each of which "steals" the power and the
distinctiveness of the gospel from us by pulling us “off the gospel line” to one side or the other.

These “thieves” can be called moralism or legalism on the one hand, and hedonism or relativism on the other hand. Another
way to put it is: the gospel opposes both religion and irreligion.

On the one hand, "moralism/religion" stresses truth without grace, for it says that we must obey the truth in order to be saved. On the other hand, "relativists/irreligion" stresses grace
without truth, for they say that we are all accepted by God (if there is a God) and we have to decide what is true for us. But "truth" without grace is not really truth, and "grace" without truth is not really grace. Jesus was "full of grace and truth".

Paul shows us, then, that we must not just simply ask in every area of life: “what is the moral way to act?” but “what is the way that is in-line with the gospel?” The gospel must be continually “thought out” to keep us from moving into our habitual moralistic or individualistic directions. We must bring everything into line with the gospel.

We have seen that the gospel is the way that anything is renewed and transformed by Christ--whether a heart, a relationship, a church, or a community. It is the key to all
doctrine and our view of our lives in this world. Therefore, all our problems come from a lack of orientation to the gospel. Put positively, the gospel transforms our hearts and thinking and approaches to absolutely everything.

In practical ways, Keller then talks about how the gospel shapes our approach to:

Discouragement
The Physical World
Love and Relationships
Suffering
Sexuality
One's Family
Self-Control
Other Races and Cultures
Evangelism
Human Authority
Human Dignity
Guilt
Self-Image
Joy and Humor
"Right Living"
Ministry in the World
Worship
The Poor
Doctrinal Distinctives
Holiness
Miracles
Church Health
and
Social Change

All problems, personal or social come from a failure to use the gospel in a radical way, to get "in line with the truth of the gospel" (Gal.2:14). All pathologies in the church and all its ineffectiveness comes from a failure to use the gospel in a radical way. We believe that if the gospel is expounded and applied in its fullness in any church, that church will look very unique. People will find both moral conviction yet compassion and flexibility.

Abortion


I have been pro-life for a long time.  Even before I trusted Christ, I knew that killing babies was wrong regardless of their size, level of development, environment, or level of dependency.

Unfortunately, I used to "preach" my pro-life views in a really harsh way to people.  I actually remember going on an insensitive rant at a girl back in 2001 until she finally broke down crying.  Turns out she had an abortion years earlier and she felt alot of guilt over it.  Rather than lead her to the forgiveness of the cross, which I didn't know at that time, I think I basically told her that she deserved the pain she was feeling.  Not so smooth :(

Tonight I watch a short film called "180" from Ray Comfort (the guy who does street evangelism with Kirk Cameron) and it was pretty good.  It compared the Nazi Holocaust with the current unseen slaughter of unborn babies in America.  I admire Ray and his style.  I think it has its own effectiveness, even though its not how I am called to operate.  Nevertheless, a good film to watch.  Check it here:

http://youtu.be/7y2KsU_dhwI

Watching this film reminded me to share my new favorite organization and speaker for the pro-life movement.  The clarity that Scott Klusendorf brings to this issue is remarkable.  He keeps things simple and easy to recall for those times that we find ourselves engaged in this sensitive topic.  And while he stays away from inflammatory rhetoric, that doesn't mean he is afraid to let the grisly images speak for themselves.

I watched his "This is Abortion" video tonight and found myself crying.  I think that every adult should see this footage to see exactly what occurs in an abortion.  Its like seeing the images of Auschwitz, a game-changer.  What is so great is Scott's amazing ability to show this video and give his logical and well-reasoned presentation with such grace and authority.

I encourage all my readers (all 4 or you...lol) to go check out Scott at:

http://www.prolifetraining.com/

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Monday, September 12, 2011

Walk it if you are gonna Talk it.



A word from John Newton that challenges me and may prove useful to others in the neo-Reformed camp.


"Whatever it be that makes us trust in ourselves that we are comparatively wise or good, so as to treat those with contempt who do not subscribe to our doctrines, or follow our party, is a proof and fruit of a self-righteous spirit. Self-righteousness can feed upon doctrines, as well as upon works; and a man may have the heart of a Pharisee, while his head is stored with orthodox notions of the unworthiness of the creature and the riches of free grace."

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Greater love...



On this 10th anniversary of the 9-11 attacks, let us reflect on the heroism and the selflessness of those brave first responders and citizens who put their own lives at risk to save others.


Let us also remember that their bravery and valor, as beautiful and moving as it is, is but a dim reflection of the ultimate loving sacrifice of human history...Christ on the cross of Golgotha.


John quotes Jesus in his gospel..."Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends." (15:13)


Indeed, in taking on the physical hardship of the cross and the spiritual weight of all human sin, Jesus bore much agony as he laid down his life for his sheep.  


So, as we rightly eulogize the heroes of 9/11..let us keep our heart in constant remembrance of the greatest hero of all time, a god-man who so loved his people that he was willing to come in their stead and endure all the punishment and pain due to them in their rebellion.  Having paid that penalty in full, he secured everlasting fellowship for us who believe with our Creator.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Victor Manuel Watters



In May of this year Victor was baptized. Here is the testimony that he wrote and shared:
I was born in a non-Christian family. I don’t think we ever went to church. And I didn’t ever think about where I would go if I died. God changed me probably a little differently from most people. He changed me through cancer. I was diagnosed with Ewing’s Sarcoma in December of 2006. They found out I had cancer because I had a seizure. The tumor in my hip got so big that it had shut down some of my organs.
I was moved into foster care because both of my parents were making bad decisions. I went to church sometimes with my new foster parents, but I didn’t care about Jesus or God at that time. In the hospital, I would always think to myself that it was by my strength that I could get through this. Well, by God’s grace I met the Watters family, which was just the start of everything.
God decided that he wanted to move me to a Christian family. The Watters were really wanting to adopt me, which was perfect timing, because at that time, my foster parents were not able to take care of me anymore. So I became a Watters.
Living with the Watters for a couple of months, my mom one day told me about Christ and how he died for me. That same day, I knelt down on our kneeler and accepted Christ. I believe that God gave me cancer for a reason, and that reason was to meet the Watters and become a Christian so that I can be with him forever!
So I’m getting baptized because I truly believe that God sent his Son, Jesus Christ, to this earth to die on the cross for all of our sins, and to save us from eternal fire. I am trusting that God is sovereign over everything, including cancer, and that he has a wonderful plan laid ahead for my life, and he will never let Satan take me from his hands.

Victor Manuel Watters passed into eternity yesterday morning at the age of 14 years. He ran a good race, and finished well. To God be the glory forever and ever. Amen.
The testimony of Victor's life is that of a young man who spread the fragrance of the knowledge of Christ everywhere he went. Last week, his mom shared this exchange between them:
Victor turned to me intently and said, “Mom, if I go … I mean soon … will you tell my family about God, about Jesus?” Then his eyes grew fierce as he clarified, “I mean really try?” And I promised as the tears rolled some more. Then we talked about making a video so that he could say what he wanted to them and others … and he asked if I would help him. Yes sir. 


God is the hero of Victor's story. God has elected, called, justified, and glorified Victor in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:30). Victor was faithful to his Savior, and he sought every opportunity to share what was precious to him. May the Lord be pleased to use the testimony of the Watters family and Victor’s life and death to bring many into his kingdom.


http://www.desiringgod.org/blog/posts/giving-thanks-for-victor-manuel-watters

Prayer at Ground Zero

From Mike Horton at the White Horse Inn...


This coming weekend the US will pause to remember those whose lives were lost so tragically in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Adding fuel to the growing fires of public debate over the role of religion in public life, New York mayor Michael Bloomberg announced his decision not to include prayers for the official event.

Theory is tested in specific cases, and this is one more opportunity to wrestle with a larger question. It’s one thing when a political leader has to choose a clerical representative out of an array of Christian denominations. Today, however, representing the religious diversity of the Republic in public ceremonies is more complicated.

On one hand, this is a constitutional issue. Especially given the history of civil religion in America, it’s implausible to imagine that the nation’s founders ever intended anything like the separation of religion and public life that the mantra “separation of church and state” has come to embody. On the other hand, it is a theological issue. In other words, even if Mayor Bloomberg has no constitutional reason to avoid the liturgical interjections in public commemorations that were included by his predecessor, the debate returns us to a recurring question of decisive importance to Christians. It’s not a question of whether prayer at public occasions of this kind is sanctioned by our Constitution, but, for Christians at least, whether we can participate (much less encourage) such acts of “non-sectarian” worship.

In a recent USA Today opinion piece, Jay Sekulow, a Christian activist and chief counsel for the American Center for Law and Justice, reproved Mayor Bloomberg for his decision (see the piece here). Recounting the history of national days of prayer, including the inter-religious “Prayer for America” event at Yankee Stadium in the aftermath of 9/11, Mr. Sekulow’s call betrays assumptions about prayer that, in my view, can only trivialize this sacred act in the long run.

Nowhere in Mr. Sekulow’s article is prayer defined in its vertical relation, as an act of worship directed to a particular deity-much less, through a particular mediator. Rather, the therapeutic idiom takes over. At least in the public argument, the idea is that prayer’s value lies in its subjective effect. The references are to “the many Americans who find solace and healing in prayer,” helping victims and their families “cope with the lost of loved ones.”

Beyond individual solace, such civil demonstrations of piety serve a therapeutic function for the nation as a whole, echoing the romantic nineteenth-century idea of a “national soul.” “In the days following 9/11, prayer was an integral part of the grieving process. Thousands attended the ‘Prayer for America’ event at Yankee Stadium, where representatives of many faiths offered prayers. It was an event that united, not divided, Americans.”

As the matter was put by another critic of the mayor’s decision, “Prayer is not always about religion, it is instead often about relief and repose.”

But all of this presses the question: Is the purpose of prayer mainly therapeutic: personal and national catharsis? Is it basically horizontal-human-centered (whether in individual or national images)? Or is it a solemn act of “calling on the name of the LORD” (i.e., Yahweh, the Father of Jesus Christ)? Does such an act have a personal object? Is that personal object the God who is revealed in Scripture as the Holy Trinity? Is the prayer directed to the Father, through the mediation of the incarnate Son, in the power of the Holy Spirit by whom we confess “Jesus as Lord”?

Imagine Elijah calling for a revival by trying to negotiate a public prayer or perhaps series of public prayers led by the prophets of Baal and the prophets of Yahweh. Israel, after all, has always been a religious nation. Isn’t it more important for the nation to acknowledge its piety than to become too obsessed with the theological specifics? The nation was divided, after all, and the point is to bring the people together through prayer, to bring them consolation in the face of national disaster. Of course, this isn’t how the story plays out at Mount Carmel, as the God of Israel proved that he alone is God and Baal is a helpless idol.

We don’t live under the old covenant, driving the prophets of Baal through with the sword. Rather, we have the privilege of religious freedom for true and false worship in this country. Nevertheless, we do not expect the state to create opportunities for the advance of Christ’s kingdom through his means of grace.

It is in churches where we confess our sins and our faith in Christ as he is clothed in the gospel. Here, we gather as a communion of saints gathered “from every tribe, tongue, people and nation” (Rev 5:9), not as a modern nation-state. We call upon the name of the LORD, which is none other than Jesus Christ, not merely for therapeutic consolation in our troubles (though this aspect is included), but for salvation from the guilt and tyranny of sin and the death penalty that it imposes. Here, with our brothers and sisters and before the face of the Triune God, our prayers acknowledge God’s justice in our condemnation and joy in God’s grace to us in his Son. With Christ as our Mediator, we are free to enter the Father’s presence with boldness, interceding for ourselves and for others, for needs pertaining to body and soul.

Prayer is also an act of witness. What are we testifying to when we seek state acts of generic devotion to the Unknown God? To what-or whom-are we witnessing when we give the impression that people can find consolation from any “God” apart from the Father who is known only in his Son and is otherwise a judge who will not let sinners go unpunished? True prayer arises as a Spirit-given response to the Word that proclaims God’s righteous judgment and gracious forgiveness in Jesus Christ.

Doubtless, such an approach will offend on all sides. Secularists will level the charge of bigotry at those who deny everlasting consolation to victims of horrific tragedies apart from Christ. Those who seek to hold on to the last vestiges of civil religion will scold fellow Christians who insist on the scandalous particularity of the gospel-in effect, surrendering the public square to secularists.

However, Christianity at its best is always an odd sect in a world of idolatry and superstition. The power lies not in its ability to negotiate general piety for a national soul, but in its most particular and offensive message: the gospel of Christ. We don’t evacuate the public square that we share with our neighbors-even the “prophets of Baal.” Rather, we testify there that Christ alone is Lord, that he alone has conquered death and hell, that our greatest terror and consolation have to do with headlines much more serious and all-encompassing than the genuine tragedy of 9/11.

We don’t need Mayor Bloomberg to help us with that. In fact, in the very act of doing so, we have to surrender the most important things we are called to say.

It is precisely because God is more important than we are, sin is much greater than something that others do to us, redemption is far greater than therapeutic consolation, and love for our neighbors encourages us to proclaim the everlasting consolation of the gospel, that we dare not trivialize that dangerous, wonderful and absolutely effective act of calling on the name of the Lord in life and in death.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Think on this...

 
...In much of the American Christian culture, if a local pastor was to stand up at his church on Sunday and make the statement that "10,000 people in our community don't have food and water and nobody seems to give a shit."...people would tend to zero in on the 's-word' and give a secondary thoughts to the 10,000 hungry folks.

Thats not to try and justify cussing, although there does seem to be a place for the use of colorful language when you are desperately trying to make a particular point...see Paul and skubalon in Phillippians 3:8.  My point is that our priorities are so far out of wack in much of the contemporary western church.

 Hopefully this will remind you (and me) that the main thing is keeping the main thing, the main thing.