4.29.2009

Advice for Young Pastors

priorities-for-day-one

By Bob Johnson

Yesterday the congregation installed you as their pastor. (It sounds like something you do to a dishwasher, doesn't it?) There were prayers, hugs, smiles, singing, food, picture-taking, and now it's Monday. Where do you begin? You know that you need to prepare excellent sermons, disciple church members, and do evangelism. But how do you actually start? What should you do on your first day?

There is a sense in which you shouldn't do a thing. No, don't stay home and watch ESPN. Just don't think that you need to change everything in three months. You may have the title, but the position of pastor is as much earned as conferred. There is much to learn about your church before you start making changes. Besides, Christ promised that he would build his church. You don't need to try to manufacture growth.

With that in mind, here are five priorities you should bring to your first day of ministry.

Priority 1Learn everything you can about your people
(Involvement – 1 Peter 5:1-4).

You are a shepherd. Good shepherds smell like sheep, and they know their sheep by name. Suggestions: Read the minutes of past business meetings. Learn all that you can about the founding of the church. What was the original doctrinal statement? Have there been any revisions to the statement or the church covenant? If so, why? Did the church ever split? Are there any unresolved issues?

Become familiar with the "old-timers." You are standing on their shoulders. Ask them about traditions, histories, policies, and so forth. Develop questions to ask every member of the congregation in order to assess their spiritual health. The involvement you gain—and the trust you earn—may even be more valuable than the information you gather.

Priority 2 – Spend time with your leadership
(Humility Philippians 2:5-8).

Suggestions: Visit your leaders at their place of work. Find out about their families, history, gifting, and leadership strengths. Ask them the questions that you are planning to ask the congregation. Ask them what you can pray for, and how you can best serve the church. Ask them for their assessment of the congregation's health? Have a list of books ready to suggest for them to read. Plan a retreat with them in order to learn more about each other. Tell them what you hope to learn about the congregation. Discuss the history with them. What events should be celebrated? Share your evangelistic conversations. E-mail them daily.

Serving your leaders will model for them how to serve the church. The first people you disciple need to be your leaders. They will disciple you as well.

Priority 3 – Plan your preaching
(God's means of growth – Romans 10:17).

Faithfully explaining and applying the Scriptures will have more impact on your church than anything else you can do. Preaching is your number 1 priority, but is listed here as number 3 for the sake of thought-progression. The information you gather will influence your preaching plan.

Since the gospel is foundational for worship, evangelism, discipleship, conflict resolution, marriages, and everything else your church faces, consider an initial expositional series through the Gospel of Mark or 1 John. Be prepared every time you preach, and preach excellent sermons.


Priority 4 – Meet with people who aren't in your church
(Considering others – Philippians 2:4).

Meet with pastors in the area. They can give you impressions about your church, and information about the community. Consider publicly praying for that pastor and church the following Sunday.

Meet with city officials. What changes are taking place in the community? What are the needs as they see them? Is there anything that you can pray for? Is there anything that your church can do?

Visit the neighbors. Introduce yourself to the people around you. It is remarkable how much you can learn, while earning much needed trust.

While the information that you gather from these individuals will be helpful, seeking them out will also provide evangelistic opportunities.

Priority 5 – Plant a fruit tree (or a garden)
(Faithfulness – 1 Corinthians 4:2).

Things that produce fruit need cultivation and time, and watching a tree grow will remind you of that. You have started a marathon; pace yourself.

Examples:

A pastor laid out an ambitious plan in his first two months to grow the church through an aggressive outreach strategy, relocate to a more visible site, and rid the calendar of worn-out and useless ministries. Nothing that he proposed was wrong, but without earning the trust to lead, he left after nine months. Behind him was a fractured, bruised, and beaten flock.

Another pastor said that he did not want to make any changes for a year while he learned as much as he could about the people. Now, fourteen years later, he has led them through many changes which were earned by his faithfulness publicly in the pulpit, and privately in personal ministry.

James Boice once said that we usually overestimate what we can do in a year, but underestimate what can be accomplished in ten. If you're a brand new pastor, set priorities now that, by God's grace, will bear fruit ten years from now.

Robert "Bob" Johnson is the pastor of Cornerstone Baptist Church in Roseville, Michigan.

HT: 9 Marks



4.28.2009

Do You Agree with the Ruling Supporting Gay “Marriage” in Iowa?

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UPDATE: The Des Moines Register Poll on this issue has been hacked. At approx 2:15 this afternoon the counts were Y=9824 27% N=26169 73% It appears the poll has been hacked and the Y vote is now growing by several hundred per second. The N vote was as high as 76% at one pint prior to 2:15.

As of this morning, 1,200+ marriage licenses have been issued to gay and lesbian couples from across my home state of Iowa (actually at least 26 of those licenses were issued to couples from outside of Iowa ... I guess now Iowa does have a tourism industry). What do you think of the Iowa Supreme Court's decision to "legalize" gay "marriage" (I say "legalize," because the ruling does not make gay marriage legal in Iowa because the people of Iowa have not been allowed to vote on the issue ... and before citing examples like slavery and the right of woman to vote, I suggest to read your history on those issues ... the American people did in fact vote on those issues ... and I say "marriage" because no man-made law can or will ever change the definition of marriage anymore than a man-made law can or will change the definition of what an apple is. Marriage, like an apple, is a specific entity, intended for a specific purpose, and no law can change these facts)? Let your voice on this issue be heard here.

When Friends Seek a Church That Won't Disrupt Their Lifestyle

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How should a Christian respond to a friend who has entered a homosexual relationship and moved to a church that accepts his lifestyle? Listen to or read John Piper's response to this important question.

HT:
Desiring God

Spiritual Gifts: Wisdom



Spiritual Gifts Series By Mark Driscoll Click to View Series

Having laid some foundational principles regarding spiritual gifts, Paul begins to list some of the spiritual gifts: "To one there is given through the Spirit the message of wisdom, to another the message of knowledge by means of the same Spirit." (1 Cor. 12:8 NIV)

The Spiritual Gift of Wisdom Defined

The gift of wisdom is the ability to have insight into people and situations that is not obvious to the average person, combined with an understanding of what to do and how to do it. It is the ability to not only see, but also apply the principles of God's Word to the practical matters of life by the "Spirit of wisdom" (Eph. 1:17).

People with the Gift of Wisdom

These people often have an ability to synthesize biblical truth and apply it to people's lives so that they make good choices and avoid foolish mistakes. These people today function well as coaches, counselors, and consultants.

Wisdom in Jesus' Ministry

Luke 2:40-52 says that Jesus was "filled with wisdom" as a boy and "grew in wisdom" as a young man so that the scholars of his day were "amazed at his understanding." Crowds who heard Jesus teach said, "What's this wisdom that has been given him?" (Mark 6:2). In Matthew 12:42, Jesus said that he was wiser than Solomon. And in Luke 21:15, Jesus said, "I will give you words and wisdom." We are also told that Jesus is the "wisdom of God" (1 Cor. 1:24, 30).

Wisdom is also illustrated in the lives of Joshua (Deut. 34:9), Solomon (1 Kings 3:5-28), and Daniel (Daniel 1:17-20; 2:19-23).

Do You Have This Gift?

Here are some questions to ask yourself:

  • When studying God's Word, do you find that you discover the meaning and its implications before others do?
  • Do you seem to understand things about God's Word that other believers with the same background and experience don't seem to know?
  • Are you able to apply biblical truth in a practical way to help counsel others to make good life choices?
  • Do you get frustrated when people make foolish decisions that damage their quality of life, because you know what they should have done instead?
  • Do you find that when people have important decisions to make, they come to you for prayer and biblical counsel?
  • Do you find that when you counsel people, God the Spirit gives you wisdom to share with them from Scripture, which they accept as God's truth to them through you?
HT: TheResurgence

Gospel Coalition Conference Media Available

HT: TheResurgence

4.27.2009

Puritan Wisdom for Biblical Counceling

In an 1988 article by Tim Keller, Puritan Resources for Biblical Counseling, he offers six reasons why the works of the Puritans are a rich resource for biblical counselors:

1. The Puritans were committed to the functional authority of the Scripture. For them it was the comprehensive manual for dealing with all problems of the heart.

2. The Puritans developed a sophisticated and sensitive system of diagnosis for personal problems, distinguishing a variety of physical, spiritual, temperamental, and demonic causes.

3. The Puritans developed a remarkable balance in their treatment because they were not invested in any one "personality theory" other than biblical teaching about the heart.

4. The Puritans were realistic about difficulties of the Christian life, especially conflicts with remaining, indwelling sin.

5. The Puritans looked not just at behavior but at underlying root motives and desires. Man is a worshiper; all problems grow out of "sinful imagination" or idol manufacturing.

6. The Puritans considered the essential spiritual remedy to be belief in the gospel, used in both repentance and the development of proper self-understanding.

Check here for a list of helpful resources for Biblical Counseling.

HT: Buzzard Blog

4.22.2009

Notes from the Gospel Coalition: Tim Keller


Session 1 - Tim Keller: "The Grand Demythologizer: The Gospel and Idolatry"

Paul's preaching was effective: it changed people's lives to such an extent that it even changed the culture. The reason for this is that Paul confronted idols.

Confront Idols

You can't preach the gospel effectively if you don't challenge idols. Paul always challenged people's idols in his preaching. In Acts 17, Paul went to the Agora, the marketplace, which is where the idols of that culture were formed. In our culture, the marketplace is not shops and busy streets, because that's no longer where culture is formed. For us, challenging idols in the marketplace means going to Hollywood, Harvard, and the New York Times—the places where ideas and beliefs are shaped.

Every culture, gender, class, city, field of work, etc., has its own idols. Idolatry is anything I look at and say, "If I have that, my life has value." Anything that is so central to your life that you feel you can't live without it is an idol. Idolatry is making a good thing an ultimate thing. Because Paul saw idols everywhere, he was a really effective preacher. Like Paul, we need to discern, expose, and destroy idols in order to preach the gospel.

3 Kinds of Idols You Have to Expose to Preach the Gospel:
  1. Personal Idols
  2. Religious Idols
  3. Cultural Idols
Personal Idols
  • Money can be an idol, especially in the business world. Everyone recognizes this as the idol of Wall Street. (All over New York City, child sacrifice is going on. If you want to succeed, you have to sacrifice your family. If you're going to get the money and power, you must sacrifice your children. Jobs are set up that way.) How do you do your job without bowing down to it—how do you demythologize money? Only by living in the gospel.
  • Romance is another idol. This is when you look to your lover or spouse for worth. Only they can make you feel valuable. You cannot lose this person. People who have a good marriage must constantly fight this idol, constantly looking to Jesus and finding their satisfaction in Jesus more than their spouse.
  • Self-expression is an idol of the artistic community.
  • Children can be idolized when you find your significance and meaning in your children. You know you're worth something if your children turn out well.

Unless you understand personal idols, your counseling, pastoring, and mentoring is going to be superficial. You won't really be able to help people. As Luther said, there's a reason the first of the Ten Commandments is about idolatry. You never break commandments 2-10 without first breaking number 1. You cannot understand moral failings or psychological problems without understanding idolatry.

Religious Idols

  • Those who worship religious idols think they are devoted to God, but they're not.
  • Truth can be made an idol. Are you resting in the rightness of your doctrine rather than the work of Jesus? If so, the Bible calls you a fool. In Proverbs, "the scoffer" is a person like this. The scoffer is always sure he is right, and always disrespectful, disdainful, and mocking toward his opponents. The internet breeds scoffers, because if you're a scoffer you get more traffic to your blog.
  • Gifts can be an idol. You can mistake spiritual gifts for spiritual fruit. Especially if you are successful in ministry, you can begin believing in justification by ministry: "I know I'm in God's will because my ministry is going well." Many of us in the Reformed world make an idol out of being a great preacher: "If I could just be a great preacher, then my life would have significance."
  • Morality is a religious idol. It's typical for Christians to feel like that God loves them and will bless them because of their moral record.
Cultural Idols

Evangelicals love to talk about cultural idols. We look back at the idols of the Enlightenment: the elevation of human reason, the belief that reason/ science will solve

Evangelicals love to talk about cultural idols. We look back at the idols of the Enlightenment: the elevation of human reason, the belief that reason/science will solve all the world's problems. Today we see the idol of individualism. We attack Western individualism, but in many traditional cultures family is an idol—so you have honor killings, women treated as property, etc. In individualistic cultures like our own, the individual is an idol. No one can tell anyone else they're wrong, no one can impose their beliefs about God on anyone else.

Any ideology can be an idol: free-market economics, communism, socialism, democracy, liberalism, etc.

Confronting Idols Is Dangerous

When idols are opposed, it's dangerous. Idols are violent. Through idols, the powers and principalities control us. If you oppose them, you take your life in your hands. Paul risked his life to oppose them; he rested in Jesus, who had already given his life to defeat the principalities and powers. Jesus defeated the idols both objectively and subjectively through the cross:

  • Objectively: Punishment for our adultery and reconciliation with God were fulfilled in Jesus.
  • Subjectively: We remember that none of our idols can die for our sins. Our idols will always crumble under the weight of our expectations. Only by living in the power of the cross, exulting in the cross, and proclaiming the cross can we be fearless and free from the power of idols. You must learn how to take the gospel to the idols.
HT: The Resurgence

4.20.2009

Gospel Coalition Conference 2009

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After a long day of driving, I have finally arrived in Chicago for the Gospel Coalition Conference. Piper, Keller, Carson, Duncan, Rykan, Driscoll, and several others will all be preaching and/ or teaching this week and I can't wait to get started. I'll be posting my thoughts about the conference throughout the week and would like to encourage anyone who cannot be at the conference to check out the live video feeds of the general sessions. I'm certain that you'll be glad you did.

On Wednesday I'll be joining the Band of Bloggers for lunch to discuss he theme of “Servants & Stewards” (referring to 1 Corinthians 4:1).

4.17.2009

Where Did We Get the Bible?

By Geoff Ashley

I received the following questions from an e-mailer regarding the origin of Scripture and thought that an overview might be helpful to anyone who may occasionally read my blog. This is a very concise summary of these issues and should only serve as a primer for the study of bibliology. I am painting with very broad strokes here.

Here is a helpful site for further study of technical issues regarding the Scripture:

  1. Why are the books that are in the Bible in it?
  2. Why are some books not included?
  3. Who decided all of this?
  4. Why does the Catholic Bible have extra books?
  5. Where do the Dead Sea Scrolls fit into everything, did we find anything NEW with them?

Why are the books that are in the Bible in it?
The theological answer to this involves some degree of circular reasoning. Why are the particular books which are found in the Bible included in the Scriptures? Because they are inspired by God and profitable for teaching, correction, etc. (2 Timothy 3:16). How do we know that these particular books are inspired by God? Because they are in the Bible.

The historical answer (which is subject to the theological) is based upon the initial criteria for the canon (the word “canon” is derived from the Greek word meaning “measure” or “rule”) which were as follows (taken from a final exam that I wrote for a class on the history of doctrine):

“The criteria for inclusion of books within the canon were primarily four. First, books must have had some manner of apostolic heritage. In order to be considered, only those books which were attributed directly to an apostle, or a person closely associated with or mentored by an apostle were included. Matthew was a disciple/apostle and thus his writings were included; Paul was an apostle and thus his writings were included; Luke was a close associate of Paul; James was the brother of Jesus and a bishop in the Jerusalem church; etc. Second, working from the included base of the Old Testament since Christianity arose from the seedbed of Judaism, only those books which complemented and expounded upon the Old Testament shadows were considered. If a book contradicted the Old Testament it was excluded from consideration. Third, books must be universally recognized, not merely being useful in certain demographical or geographical contexts. Finally, the gospels in particular must be centered upon the bloody and gory crucifixion of Christ Jesus. Books which did not meet each of these criteria were therefore not included in the conversation, which really was a series of monologues during most of the early church period.

Why are some books not included?
Again, first reason is circular. Theologically, some books were not included because they were not inspired.

Historically they were not included because they do not meet listed criteria above. This was no conspiracy like Dan Brown’s The DaVinci Code would have us believe. Rather, all of the “Gnostic gospels” (the “gospel” of Thomas, the “gospel” of Judas, etc.) clearly contradicted the very gospel which was proclaimed by all the apostles (and Galatians 1:6-9 speaks very candidly about the danger of promoting that which was/is contrary to that which was proclaimed by the apostles). BTW, “gnosticism” was a sect which perverted the picture of Christ by introducing a number of dualisms. They taught that the material world was evil while the immaterial or spiritual world was good. Such a disdain for the physical world led to a denial of the incarnation and subsequent denial of the atonement.

Furthermore, these Gnostic texts were all written in the 2nd century whereas our Scriptures (New Testament) were all written in the 1st century. The Gnostic gospels were therefore written a generation or two after the death of the last apostle (John) and thus we can confidently say that they were not authored by the supposed authors (Thomas and Judas were both dead well before either supposed “gospel” was written). In addition, these text do not center on the cross of Christ (remember that the atonement is neglected because it was foolishness to the gnostic mind to conceive of a God incarnate suffering in the flesh) as most of them present Jesus as a spirit being who merely possessed a human body, but was not truly human and did not truly die for our sins. Obviously, since this is an attack on the heart of the gospel, church fathers easily recognized that these books were not the product of men inspired by God. (By the way, you can see John writing against early forms of Gnosticism in 1 John – showing that the apostles were clearly opposed to what was themes which were developing in parts of the church as perversions of Orthodoxy).

Who decided all of this?
There was rather general consensus throughout the early Church on most books of the Bible. There was some debate as far as the authorship of Hebrews and a couple of other issues like that, but we have fairly consistent consensus. No ecumenical council met specifically in order to decide the canon (until the Reformation - though various councils which were called for other purposes did comment on the issue of canonicity). Rather, as the individual letters moved throughout the empire, more people accepted them as authentic. We have to remember that each letter was written individually and therefore it is highly unlikely that anyone would have possessed each and every book of the Bible until well into the 2nd century. Once again, this is no conspiracy, just the nature of writing in those days. They didn’t have printing presses so the task was laborious, not to mention quite expensive. Plus, the average person could not write and maybe had some elementary ability to read, but certainly not much. It was very much an oral culture. BTW, we have quotations and allusions to most if not all of the books of the Bible by church fathers by the early 3rd century.

Why does the Catholic Bible have extra books?
They have the exact same New Testament. Nothing is different there. The issue is the apocryphal books of the Old Testament. The Roman Catholic Church includes those books which were written during the intertestamental period. Early church fathers recognized that these books were “helpful” but not “inspired” and always included this distinction when listing them. However, some Catholic doctrines (like purgatory) receive some level of support within the apocryphal books and therefore the Reformation-age Catholic church in particular officially declared the books to be in the canon in order to protect certain doctrines.

Where do the Dead Sea Scrolls fit into everything, did we find anything NEW with them?
The Dead Sea Scrolls were a very important find for critical analysis of the text, but didn’t really offer anything novel. Rather, before the discovery of the scrolls, our earliest authentic copies of the Old Testament were from the 9th century. Some of the scrolls found at Qumran were from the 2nd century B.C. Given that the text was almost exactly the same as our later copies, we can have great confidence in the scribal copying process of the past. Therefore, the Dead Sea Scrolls are very important for biblical studies as a witness to our previously held beliefs regarding the validity of the extant texts.

HT: Merely Theological

Politicizing the Gospel: A Path to Spiritual Treason

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Religion + Politics = Politics. I believe that's true. Anytime we seek to mix our religious beliefs with our political convictions, it's our religious beliefs that are often forgotten, even if just momentarily, in order that a political position might be advanced. Phil Johnson, President of Grace to You, the ministry of world-renowned radio Bible teacher, author & pastor, Dr. John MacArthur, discusses the issue of Politicizing the Gospel. According to Phil:

"I thank God for Christians whose vocation is to serve faithfully in our government. I also have no objection to Christian bloggers who deal with political subjects. I read some of those blogs myself, and I often benefit from their insights. But let's be clear, here: The church as a body has no calling to organize and protest in the political realm. Moreover, government service and political campaigning are different vocations from the calling of a pastor. It's well-nigh impossible to be a good pastor full time if you also fancy yourself a political lobbyist ... . Practically the worst kind of spiritual treason any pastor or church body could ever commit would be to supplant the gospel message with a different message, or to allow a merely moral agenda to crowd out our spiritual duties. That is exactly the risk we take when we pour money and resources into political and legislative remedies for our society's spiritual problems."

Politics are personal and religion is personal. As long as this is so, it will remain difficult for many, being passionate about what they believe in both arenas, to keep them separate; but as Christians it's important to remember which King we serve and where His kingdom is located (John 18:36). I'm not saying that Christians shouldn't voice their concerns or use Scripture to guide their political convictions, but we must be careful not to take Scripture out of context or add something to the Bible that really isn't there.
 

Have a listen to Phil Johnson's thoughts here.

HT: Monergism

4.16.2009

Can't We Get Any Straight Answers from Christianity?


HT: Desiring God

The Importance of Studying and Loving Little Children

By Justin Taylor

Do you want to enter God's kingdom?

“Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven" (Matt. 18:3).

Do you want to be great in God's kingdom?

"Whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven" (Matt. 18:4).

Do you want to receive Jesus and the Father?

"And he took a child and put him in the midst of them, and taking him in his arms, he said to them, 'Whoever receives one such child in my name receives me, and whoever receives me, receives not me but him who sent me.'" (Mark 9:36-37)
Do you want to avoid God's judgment on your teaching, leadership, and parenting?

“Whoever receives one such child in my name receives me, but whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened around his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea." (Matt. 18:5-6)
Do you need motivation to love and welcome kids?

“See that you do not despise one of these little ones. For I tell you that in heaven their angels always see the face of my Father who is in heaven." (Matt. 18:10)

HT: Between Two Worlds

How Pro-Life Are You?

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By Sharon Hodde

Conservative Christian=Hardcore pro-life advocate.

Over the past several decades, that is how the world has come to define us. And for good reason–the pro-life movement has been one of the definitive issues of evangelicalism. If you’re a conservative Christian, then you are a staunch believer in the pro-life movement, so much so that many Christians have become “one issue” voters–if your candidate is pro-life, then nothing else matters. Vote for them.

This is where we find ourselves today. You’re either pro-life or pro-choice. And in the ears of many evangelicals, that means you’re either a good Christian or a bad Christian.

However, I’m starting to wonder if the pro-lifers are really as devoted as they claim to be.

My doubt began to emerge in the last couple months after my fiancé and I decided to practice the natural family planning method of birth control. Considering numerous factors, such as the possibility that hormonal birth control methods like the pill can cause unintended abortions in early pregnancies, we prayed about it and felt this was the best path for us to take.

I’ll save that blog topic for another day, but what I want to highlight right now is the reactions we’ve received upon telling our Christian friends that we are practicing this method. It’s ranged from anything like, “What the heck is that?” to “Does that mean there are times each month when you won’t be able to have sex??” (horror of horrors)

But perhaps the one response that I’ve heard more than any other is,”What if you get pregnant??”

Initially, I found myself getting defensive about the method and entering into a kind of debate. I would explain how scientific it is, and how I know many people who have practiced the method without getting pregnant until they planned to, and how no method is fool-proof.

But one day, after hearing this reaction for the 100th time and entering into yet another debate about its effectiveness in preventing pregnancy, I stopped myself and asked, “Wait a second, is getting pregnant really all that bad?”

And therein lies the rub–the mindset behind that question, AND my response, seems to overlook two very important things:

1. Babies are good.
2. God created marriage to lead to families.

Read more here.

HT: She Worships

4.15.2009

What Does the Bible Say About Paying the Tax Man?

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17 Tell us, then, what you think. Is it lawful to pay taxes to Caesar, or not?” 18 But Jesus, aware of their malice, said, “Why put me to the test, you hypocrites? 19 Show me the coin for the tax.” And they brought him a denarius. [1] 20 And Jesus said to them, “Whose likeness and inscription is this?” 21 They said, “Caesar's.” Then he said to them, “Therefore render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and to God the things that are God's.” - Matthew 22:17-21

6 For because of this you also pay taxes, for the authorities are ministers of God, attending to this very thing. 7 Pay to all what is owed to them: taxes to whom taxes are owed, revenue to whom revenue is owed, respect to whom respect is owed, honor to whom honor is owed. - Romans 13:6-7

Most Pray Like a Calvinist

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Have you ever noticed that Christians, regardless of which way they lean theologically, almost always pray like a Calvinist? Think about it. If you have non-Christian friend or family member that you have been praying would give their life to Christ, how do you do it? What do you say, or more to the point, how do you say it? Do you pray that the person would search for Christ? That they would choose God? Probably not. You probably pray that God would draw him or her to Himself. Or you pray that God would provide you an opportunity to share the gospel with them and that God would prepare their heart to receive that message. Or maybe you pray that God would use someone in his or her life, maybe even you, to open their eyes to their need for a Savior. Nearly all of us pray in a way that recognizes the sovereignty of God in all things, including salvation. We don't pray for those who don't know Christ as their King to better exercise their free will, make better choices, and begin seeking after God. No, we plead to God on behalf of our friends and family, praying that He would draw them to Him and open their eyes to their own sinfulness, repent of that sin, and receive a new life through Christ.

4.14.2009

Colbert and Ehrman on the Resurrection and Whether Jesus is God

Stephen Colbert goes at it again with Bart Ehrman on the Colbert show this past Thursday...this one is even better than their first encounter a couple of years ago...

HT: JD Greear

No One Can Serve Two Masters

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“No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money."

Gay "Marriage" Has Arrived in the Heartland

marriage-redined-in-iowa

By Voddie Bauchman

In a shocking unanimous decision, Iowa’s Supreme Court joined the ranks of states like California, Massachusetts, and Connecticut in declaring that homosexuals have a Constitutional “right” to marry. While the cases on the coast are alarming enough, the idea of a state in America’s heartland falling prey to the sodomy lobby is almost unthinkable. That is, until you understand the philosophical underpinnings of such decisions and the cultural trajectory we are currently witnessing. Remember, Iowa was the first state to signal to the rest of America that Barack Obama (among the most radically pro-homosexual, pro-abortion, neo-Marxist candidates ever to run for the office of President) really had a shot to win it all.

The judges who made this decision are products of the same culture that produced President Obama. A closer look at their decision reveals the kind of reasoning they employed. Their decision is rife with emotion, question-begging logic, and legal precedents that will leave the polygamists, polyamorists, and pedophiles jumping for joy. I know there are those who consider such arguments “red herrings” that have nothing to do with the case at hand, but Elizabeth F. Emens of the University of Chicago School of Law would beg to differ. Read her paper, “MONOGAMY’S LAW: COMPULSORY MONOGAMY AND POLYAMOROUS EXISTENCE” and try to convince yourself that we are not on a slippery slope (one Emens embraces gladly). You may also want to read Justice Scalia’s dissenting opinion in Lawrence v. Texas.

Though I am not a lawyer (nor do I play one on TV), I do read the law. I read briefs, decisions, dissenting opinions, and I have been known to refer to my copy of “Blackstone” now and again. Nevertheless, the law was never meant to be mysterious. It doesn’t take a lawyer to read and understand the decision these seven men and women made in Iowa. Moreover, it does not take a law degree to know that their philosophical presuppositions are not only erroneous, but dangerous.
*Note: There is far too much in the decision to cover in a blog. Please read the decision here.



ERROR #1: HOMOSEXUAL MARRIAGE IS A CIVIL RIGHTS ISSUE

Right off the bat the Iowa decision jumps on the “Gay is the New Black” bandwagon. They followed the logic of leading homosexual advocates who argue that homosexuality is not only a “Civil Rights” issue; it is morally equivalent to blackness. As a black man, I am insulted by this line of reasoning. As a thinking man, I am amused. However, as an Constitution-loving American, I am frightened when I see it in legal decisions. The Iowa Supreme Court argued:

In the first reported case of the Supreme Court of the Territory of Iowa, In re Ralph, 1 Morris 1 (Iowa 1839), we refused to treat a human being as property to enforce a contract for slavery and held our laws must extend equal protection to persons of all races and conditions. 1 Morris at 9. This decision was seventeen years before the United States Supreme Court infamously decided Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. (19 How.) 393, 15 L. Ed. 691 (1856), which upheld the rights of a slave owner to treat a person as property. Similarly, in Clark v. Board of Directors, 24 Iowa 266 (1868), and Coger v. North West. Union Packet Co., 37 Iowa 145 (1873), we struck blows to the concept of segregation long before the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483, 74 S. Ct. 686, 98 L. Ed. 873 (1954). Iowa was also the first state in the nation to admit a woman to the practice of law, doing so in 1869. Admission of Women to the Bar, 1 Chicago Law Times 76, 76 (1887). Her admission occurred three years before the United States Supreme Court affirmed the State of Illinois’ decision to deny women admission to the practice of law.

Notice all the references to “Civil Rights” cases. Notice also that their argument begs the question! They do not ‘prove’ that homosexuality is a Civil Rights issue; they assume it. There is no Constitutional Right to sodomy. Moreover, homosexuals are not deprived of their Civil Rights in marriage, because they have the same rights in that regard as every American. That’s right... HOMOSEXUALS HAVE THE RIGHT TO MARRY! What they don’t have the right to is same-sex marriage. This, however, is not a right, but a definition. Hence, the court addressed the wrong issue. Listen to the emotion and philosophical presupposition in the argument:

It is true the marriage statute does not expressly prohibit gay and lesbian persons from marrying; it does, however, require that if they marry, it must be to someone of the opposite sex. Viewed in the complete context of marriage, including intimacy, civil marriage with a person of the opposite sex is as unappealing to a gay or lesbian person as civil marriage with a person of the same sex is to a heterosexual.

Incredible! The Supreme Court of Iowa is basing its opinion on what is “unappealing to a gay or lesbian person.” This is not jurisprudence; this is social engineering. Unfortunately, the court knows that most people will never read their decision, and those who do are so awash in the relativism of the culture that they will not recognize the overreach. What’s worse, most people will view the court’s action as heroic and liberating. But wait... there’s more:

Thus, the right of a gay or lesbian person under the marriage statute to enter into a civil marriage only with a person of the opposite sex is no right at all. Under such a law, gay or lesbian individuals cannot simultaneously fulfill their deeply felt need for a committed personal relationship, as influenced by their sexual orientation, and gain the civil status and attendant benefits granted by the statute. Instead, a gay or lesbian person can only gain the same rights under the statute as a heterosexual person by negating the very trait that defines gay and lesbian people as a class—their sexual orientation.

In other words, a right that you cannot enjoy is no right at all. Imagine this phrase applied to other sexual deviants. “Thus, the right of a [pedophile] under the marriage statute to enter a civil marriage only with a person [of legal age] is no right at all.” This is utterly absurd. However, we have been so inundated with the “Gay=Black” mantra that most people don’t even blink. What happens when the polyamorists wear us down?

This is a hallmark of the homosexual lobby. Just say it enough and people will begin to believe it. We have judges in Iowa who have said that a persons behavior (homosexual sodomy) is equivalent to a person’s ethnicity. By the way, Michael Steele, the new head of the RNC, made the same argument in his interview with GQ Magazine. This is an echo of the statement of Julian Bond, former head of the NAACP, who said:

African Americans... were the only Americans who were enslaved for two centuries, but we were far from the only Americans suffering discrimination then and now,” Bond said. “Sexual disposition parallels race. I was born this way. I have no choice. I wouldn’t change it if I could. Sexuality is unchangeable.  (Ertha Melzer, “NAACP chair says ‘gay rights are civil rights’, ”Washington Blade, Apr. 08, 2005)

The justices have clearly been influenced by this type of thinking. They even refer to “sexual orientation” as an “immutable characteristic” later in the decision. I am sure there are thousands of “Ex-Gays” who would be glad to testify on this point. However, I would venture to say the ‘verdict’ was in on this issue long before there was any testimony. The Justices are making law based on the assumption that homosexual sodomy is a Civil Right.

My blackness is an immutable characteristic; homosexual sodomy is not. There is no established, irrefutable evidence that people are born homosexual. Even if such evidence existed, it would no more make homosexual sodomy acceptable than a domestic violence gene would make brutality against women acceptable. Additionally, comparing homosexual marriage to so-called inter-racial marriage (a term I reject since though there are many ethnicities, there is but one race finding its origin in Adam) is an absolute farce. Loving v. Virginia, for example, was not about a re-definition of marriage. Instead, it was a recognition of the fact that black men and white men (like black women and white women) are essentially the same. Therefore, denying a black man and a white woman (or vise versa) the right to marry is truly denying a god-given, unalienable. This was a recognition of the manhood of black men and the womanhood of black women as image-bearers of the Most High God. Marriage itself did not have to change as a result of the Loving decision.

ERROR #2: HOMOSEXUALS ARE AN OPPRESSED CLASS OF PEOPLE

One of the most sinister arguments in the homosexual activists arsenal is the idea that homosexuals are an oppressed “class” of people. In essence, the homosexual lobby has convinced seemingly intelligent people that the revulsion some people feel when confronted with unnatural, demeaning, health-destroying sexual acts (God calls it an abomination) makes the performers of those acts an oppressed minority. Marshall Kirk and Hunter Madsen planted the seeds for this strategy in their 1989 book, After the Ball. They wrote:

AIDS, though a loose cannon, is a cannon indeed. As cynical as it may seem, AIDS gives us a chance, however brief, to establish ourselves as a victimized minority legitimately deserving of America’s special protection and care. (Marshall Kirk and Hunter Madsen, After the Ball: How America Will Conquer Its Fear and Hatred of Gays in the ‘90s, New York: Doubleday, 1989. p. xxv)

It appears the After the Ball strategy has worked like a charm. The homosexual activists campaign for “victimized minority” status appears to be the blueprint for the Iowa decision. The decision reads:
So, today, this court again faces an important issue that hinges on our definition of equal protection. This issue comes to us with the same importance as our landmark cases of the past. The same-sex-marriage debate waged in this case is part of a strong national dialogue centered on a fundamental, deep-seated, traditional institution that has excluded, by state action, a particular class of Iowans. This class of people asks a simple and direct question: How can a state premised on the constitutional principle of equal protection justify exclusion of a class of Iowans from civil marriage?

Note again the question-begging logic. How did homosexual sodomy get “class” status? I wonder if the Justices consider the members of NAMBLA (the North American Man/Boy Love Association... Motto: Eight is Too Late) a “class of people” whose grievances need to be addressed under the equal protection clause. How is homosexual sodomy different from other forms of aberrant sexual behavior? Where does the logic of this argument end? The decision reads the Iowa Constitution in a manner that strains credulity:

The foundational principle of equal protection is expressed in article I, section 6 of the Iowa Constitution, which provides: “All laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation; the general assembly shall not grant to any citizen or class of citizens, privileges or immunities, which, upon the same terms shall not equally belong to all citizens.”


Somehow I don’t think the framers of the Iowa Constitution who wrote, “WE THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF IOWA, grateful to the Supreme Being for the blessings hitherto enjoyed, and feeling our dependence on Him for a continuation of those blessings, do ordain and establish a free and independent government, by the name of the State of Iowa”, ever envisioned those with a predilection for deviant sexual acts when they penned the equal protection clause. Moreover, Iowa had anti sodomy laws at its founding, and a statute in 1892 that read, “Any person who shall commit sodomy, shall be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary not more than ten years nor less than one year.” (Laws of Iowa 1892, page 66, ch. 39, enacted Mar. 26, 1892) How then do the current Justices find room to redefine marriage in this statute? They don’t! They simply made it up.

ERROR #3: HOMOSEXUALS ARE ALREADY ‘BEING’ MARRIED... WE’RE JUST MAKING IT LEGAL


The third major error in the Iowa decision is their unfortunate assumption that the existence of quasi-marital relationships among homosexuals serves to support the idea of legitimizing such relationships.
Therefore, with respect to the subject and purposes of Iowa’s marriage laws, we find that the plaintiffs are similarly situated compared to heterosexual persons. Plaintiffs are in committed and loving relationships, many raising families, just like heterosexual couples. Moreover, official recognition of their status provides an institutional basis for defining their fundamental relational rights and responsibilities, just as it does for heterosexual couples. Society benefits, for example, from providing same- sex couples a stable framework within which to raise their children and the power to make health care and end-of-life decisions for loved ones, just as it does when that framework is provided for opposite-sex couples.
This statement raises a number of important questions. How do the Justices know that the plaintiffs’ relationships were committed and loving? How does a same-sex couple raise children “just like heterosexual couples” if they do not have the same male/female makeup? Can a mother function ‘exactly’ like a father? Can a father fulfill all the roles of a mother? Is the law in the business of defining love? What legal standard did the Justices use to define commitment? If one of these couples experienced adultery, separation, or divorce, would that have change the decision? If so, then the law is purely situational and there is no longer an objective standard. If not, then the statement is superfluous and has no place in a legal decision.

I’m amazed at how far the Justices have moved away from the practice of law. These men and women are engaging in social engineering from the bench. And, as with the aforementioned errors, this point would have catastrophic implications if applied to other sexual deviants. For example, wouldn’t legalizing polyamory go a long way toward “provid[ing] an institutional basis for defining their fundamental relational rights and responsibilities, just as it does for [monogamous] couples”?
Unfortunately, most Christians have no idea how to think about, let along reason through and respond to these things. Moreover, the legal profession has been duped most people into believing that the law is so beyond the average person that we need not try to understand it. However, these statements are crystal clear. They are also not law. This is a clear overreach. The Homosexual lobby has co-opted the print and television media, universities, law schools, legislatures, and the courts. This was the plan Kirk and Madsen laid out in After the Ball:

The campaign we outline in this book, though complex, depends centrally upon a program of unabashed propaganda, firmly grounded in long-established principles of psychology and advertising. (Kirk & Madsen)

It appears their campaign has been successful not only on the coasts, but throughout the country. Who would have thought the midwest would fall like this? Even if Kirk and Madsen envisioned this happening, it was only in their wildest dreams.

HT: Voddie Bauchman

4.11.2009

CS



Praise God!

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"If we have been united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his."
~ Romans 6:5

Good Friday

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The Good Friday service at Westkirk was awesome. People were moved. Tears flowed. Pride was shattered. And we feared that we might not have enough bread and wine prepared to serve all those participating in communion; we prayed and God provided. At the beginning of the service we handed out stones representing our sin laden guilt and we read scripture pointing us toward the recognition of our sin and the consequences due to all who fail to meet God's demand for perfection.

The Stone of Condemnation (Luke 23:32-34)
The Stone of Separation (Luke 23:35-43)
The Stone of Sorrow (John 19:25-27)
The Stone of Despair (Mark 5:33-34)
The Stone of Suffering (John 19:28-30)
The Stone of Death (Mark 15:37-39)

As we left the service in silence, we invited everyone to place their stone at the foot of the cross, leaving behind their worries, letting go of the weight of their sinfulness, marking an encounter with God, and remembering the debt Jesus paid for all of God's chosen children.

4.10.2009

"It is finished."

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4.08.2009

Reflecting on Our Sinfulness at the Lord's Supper

"The Lord displays to us all the treasures of his spiritual grace, inasmuch as he associates us in all the blessings and riches of our Lord Jesus. Let us recollect, then, that the Supper is given us as a mirror in which we may contemplate Jesus Christ crucified in order to deliver us from condemnation, and raised again in order to procure for us righteousness and eternal life. It is indeed true that this same grace is offered us by the gospel, yet as in the Supper we have more ample certainty, and fuller enjoyment of it, with good cause do we recognise this fruit as coming from it."

- John Calvin

Creating Communities of Grace

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By Tim Chester

How can we create communities of grace? Let me suggest seven ideas:

1. Make the connections
We need to teach, speak, sing, and pray grace. But we also need to make connections for people. We can believe in justification by faith for the final day, but doubt justification by faith for the next day. On a Monday morning in the workplace we are still trying to prove ourselves, to find identity in our achievements.

2. Welcome the mess
Welcome messy people. Don’t suppress conflict. Don’t hide problems.

3. Stop pretending
Don’t hide your own problems. You’ll need to exercise some discretion: let everyone know you struggle and let some people know what you struggle with.

4. Stop performing
Don’t put on a show. Don’t push people to perform, to produce results, to get it right all the time. Give people permission to fail. We’ve realized, for example, that polished Bible studies and articulate prayers disenfranchise semi-literate people.

5. Eat and drink with broken people
Jesus eats and drinks with sinners. It’s a powerful expression of community. We think we’re enacting grace if we run projects for the poor, but we’re only halfway there. We still act from a position of superiority, proclaiming that we are able and they are unable. The dynamic is totally different when we eat together. We meet as equals, share together, affirm one another, enjoy one another.

6. Give people time to change
How long did it take for you to become perfectly like Jesus? Of course, you’re still changing. There seem to be some sins we’re prepared to work on over a lifetime, but others where we demand instant change. Why is this? The answer, of course, is that we want people to be respectable. We don’t want a messy community.

7. Focus on the heart
All too often we focus on the behaviors we would like someone to stop or start. But Jesus says our behavior comes from the heart (Mark 7:20-23). Our focus needs to be on the heart. Our job is help people find joy in Christ.

HT: Mars Hill Blog

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