Saturday, June 26, 2010

Matthew Henry on the Lord's Prayer

There is a great online resource available on prayer, the complete text of Matthew Henry's classic book Method for Prayer. Here is the link to Chapter 7 which covers the Lord's Prayer. You may wish to add this to your devotional reading as we continue our study of the Lord's Prayer in class. The unique aspect of Henry's book is that it teaches us to use the Scriptures as the foundation of our prayers. Check it out.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Church: Like a Business......or a Family?

Here's a very clear articulation by Mark Driscoll on what has to happen for a church to really function as a healthy body.....

Friday, June 11, 2010

The Lord's Prayer: 3 Strands

As we continue to study and apply the Lord's Prayer, this article by David Powlison, Praying Beyond the Sick List, is very useful. Here is a summary of the article included on the Between Two Worlds blog (one I encourage you to visit frequently) that highlights three strands of Biblical prayer, woven together in the Lord's Prayer:

"In this article David Powlison identifies three emphases of biblical prayer:

  1. circumstantial prayers
  2. wisdom prayers
  3. kingdom prayers

He explains:

  1. Sometimes we ask God to change our circumstances—heal the sick, give us daily bread, protect us from suffering and evildoers, make our political leaders just, convert our friends and family, make our work and ministries prosper, provide us with a spouse, quiet this dangerous storm, send us rain, give us a child.
  2. Sometimes we ask God to change us—deepen our faith, teach us to love each other, forgive our sins, make us wise where we tend to be foolish, help us know You better, give us understanding of Scripture, teach us how to encourage others.
  3. Sometimes we ask God to change everything by revealing Himself more fully on the stage of real life, magnifying the degree to which His glory and rule are obvious—Your kingdom come, Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven, be exalted above the heavens, let Your glory be over all of the earth, let Your glory fill the earth as the waters cover the sea, come Lord Jesus.

The Lord’s Prayer, he points out, contains all three, tightly interwoven.

The Lord’s kingdom (#3) involves the destruction of our sins (#2) and our sufferings (#1). His reign causes a flourishing of love’s perfect wisdom and a wealth of situational blessing. Prayers for God to change my circumstances and to change me are, in their inner logic, requests that He reveal His glory and mercy on the stage of this world.

I especially appreciate his emphasis that these strands are mutually reinforcing, so that if one gets neglected it hurts the other two as well.

When any of these three strands of prayer gets detached from the other two, prayer tends to go sour.

If you just pray for better circumstances, then God becomes the errand boy (usually somewhat disappointing) who exists to give you your shopping list of desires and pleasures—no sanctifying purposes, no higher glory. Prayer becomes gimme, gimme, gimme.

If you only pray for personal change, then it tends to reveal an obsession with moral self improvement, a self-absorbed spirituality detached from engaging with other people and the tasks of life. Where is the longing for Christ’s kingdom to right all wrongs, not just to alleviate my sins so I don’t feel bad about myself? Prayer pursues self-centered, morally-strenuous asceticism, with little evidence of real love, trust, or joy.

If we only pray for the sweeping invasion of the kingdom, then prayers tend towards irrelevance and overgeneralization, failing to work out how the actual kingdom rights real wrongs, wipes away real tears, and removes real sins. Such prayers pursue a God who never touches ground until the last day.

May God help us to have prayers that weave together all three."


Saturday, June 5, 2010

SBC Convention: The GCR Debate

Blogger Trevin Wax has an excellent summary of the differing viewpoints around the primary issue that will be addressed at the upcoming SBC convention in Orlando, the recommendation of the GCR Task Force. Here is the summary of areas addressed in the final proposal:

1. Getting the Mission Right

2. Making Our Values Transparent
3. Celebrating and Empowering Great Commission Giving
4. Reaching North America
5. Reaching Unreached and Underserved People Groups within North America
6. Promoting the Cooperative Program and Elevating Stewardship

7. The Call of the Nations and the SBC Allocation Budget

From Wax's blog post:
It’s easy to be confused about the recommendations of the Great Commission Task Force. Through state papers, blogs and websites, the conversation about the future of the Southern Baptist Convention has been going on at a furious pace.

Whenever two points of view become overly politicized, the rhetoric heats up. Hype can eventually obscure reality, leading to misunderstandings and miscommunication on the part of both camps. GCR supporters have sometimes spoken as if this resolution will be the spark of a worldwide revival which will send renewal through the SBC. GCR detractors have sometimes spoken as if these resolutions would end the SBC as we know it and destroy all our cooperative efforts.

In this article, I wish to cut through the hype by briefly summarizing the final GCR proposal and the contending viewpoints, providing clarity regarding these recommendations.

Read the whole article here.