Saturday, March 13, 2010

Pray for Bryant

From the Baptist Press:

"ORLANDO, Fla. (BP)--Georgia pastor Bryant Wright will be nominated for president of the Southern Baptist Convention, a Florida pastor announced March 12.

The nomination of Bryant Wright, senior pastor of the Atlanta-area Johnson Ferry Baptist Church in Marietta, will be made by David Uth, pastor of First Baptist Church in Orlando, according to a March 12 report by the Florida Baptist Witness.

No other nominees for SBC offices have been announced to date; the SBC annual meeting will be June 15-16 in Orlando."

Read the whole article.

A Cause for Mourning and Prayer

From Romans Ch 1:
21
For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened. 22 Claiming to be wise, they became fools, 23 and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things.

24 Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves, 25 because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever! Amen.

Reading the following should cause us to mourn for our culture, its institutions (notable here are the Girl Scouts, the United Nations, and Planned Parenthood -and also note that this event was held at a church center owned and operated by the United Methodist Church) and for our young people who are being fed the lies that pleasurable sex is something to be worshiped. Yes, one cannot read the brochure (please read it but be warned it is fairly graphic) referenced in this article and miss the fact that sex is one of the most powerful idols in our culture today. And one cannot also miss the profits that are at stake for PP to the degree that this playing upon our culture's idols is successful.

"The World Association of Girl Scouts and Girl Guides hosted a no-adults-welcome panel at the United Nations this week where Planned Parenthood was allowed to distribute a brochure entitled “Healthy, Happy and Hot.” The event was part of the annual United Nations Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) which concludes this week.

Happy, Healthy and HotThe brochure, aimed at young people living with HIV, contains explicit and graphic details on sex, as well as the promotion of casual sex in many forms. The brochure claims, “Many people think sex is just about vaginal or anal intercourse… But, there are lots of different ways to have sex and lots of different types of sex. There is no right or wrong way to have sex. Just have fun, explore and be yourself!”

You can read more here and here.

Lets continue to speak truth into our young people's lives and pray for them, that Christ would be of such superior pleasure to them than what the world tells them they need!

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Man of Sorrows

Man of sorrows what a name
For the Son of God who came
Ruined sinners to reclaim

Halleluiah what a savior

Bearing shame and scoffing rude
In my place condemned He stood
Sealed my pardon with His blood

Halleluiah what a savior

Guilty, vile and helpless we
Spotless lamb of God was He
Full atonement can it be

Halleluiah what a savior

Lifted up was He to die
It is finished was His cry
Now in heaven exalted high
Praise the Lord
Praise the Lord
Praise the Lord

When He comes our glorious king
All his ransomed home to bring
Then anew this song we’ll sing
Halleluiah Halleluiah

Halleluiah what a savior

Parenting Our Children to Have Right Thoughts about God

As a parent, I sometimes get anxiety over the fact that because of my own sinfulness (anger, impatience, etc.), I could be cultivating the wrong thoughts about God in my kids as I try to teach obedience. I pray that they will learn of a God of grace and mercy, as well as justice. If this resonates with any of you, here is a wise bit of advice from CJ Mahaney to a father who asked for guidance on this very issue. Here are the main points of his answer:

  • You have the privilege of introducing them to God the Father and describing the ways in which he is different from you, different from all sinful fathers, and how in any way you are like him it’s only because of grace that you reflect him. See Luke 11:11–13.
  • Your honest confession of your sin to your children will protect them from having hard thoughts about you or God.
  • Communicating your affection for them—and joy when you are with them—promotes both good and accurate thoughts about God.
  • Initiate time with them at both planned and spontaneous times. Don’t leave them with the impression that they get most of your attention when they disobey. Let them know you are so grateful for them and love being with them as much as possible.
  • Bless your children with many gifts in many forms! See Luke 11 again. Study your children in order to discern what gifts would genuinely bless them and then purpose to surprise them as often as possible.
  • Requiring appropriate obedience does not promote hard thoughts about God. This only happens when we do so in self-righteousness or anger. See point 2 again.
  • Frequently preach the gospel to them (and not at them). Reveal to your children just how far God has gone to show his love for sinners like us.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Wisdom on Listening to Our Pastor

J.R. Vassar from Apostle's Church in NYC has some good words here on how to approach listening to our pastor's sermons week after week (italics mine - hopefully our class is seeing fruit from our being in the Word!):

"For those that have to listen to preachers every week, I have two quick things to say:
  • Trust that there is a cumulative effect to your pastor's preaching. Don't expect him to hit a home run every week. It is impossible. Receive the sermon trusting that God will add it to the work that He is currently doing in your life and bring forth fruit. Your pastor's sermons should be supplemental to the work God is doing in you through your own times in the word.
  • Define the win. Don't judge your pastor on whether he is funny or dynamic or captivating. If your pastor is preaching the bible, exalting Christ, keeping the Gospel central and applying it to your context, then you have a great pastor and you should thank God for him. Stop complaining about your pastor's delivery; pray for your receptivity. I hear people criticize their pastor's preaching but never scrutinize their own listening. Maybe the problem is not what you think it is. "
The whole post is worth reading here.

HT: Vitamin Z

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Wisdom on the Why Questions

I found this quote by David Powlison, a wise Christian counselor, very profound and worth meditating on. I pray it might be used to especially bless those of us who have recently gone through a time of loss, pain or suffering:

"So often the initial reaction to painful suffering is Why me? Why this? Why now? Why? . . .

[God] comes for you, in the flesh, in Christ, into suffering, on your behalf. He does not offer advice and perspective from afar; he steps into your significant suffering. He will see you through, and work with you the whole way. He will carry you even in extremis. This reality changes the questions that rise up from your heart. That inward-turning “why me?” quiets down, lifts its eyes, and begins to look around.You turn outward and new, wonderful questions form.

Why you?

Why you?

Why would you enter this world of evils?

Why would you go through loss, weakness, hardship, sorrow, and death?

Why would you do this for me, of all people?

But you did.

You did this for the joy set before you.

You did this for love.

You did this showing the glory of God in the face of Christ.

As that deeper question sinks home, you become joyously sane. The universe is no longer supremely about you. Yet you are not irrelevant. God’s story makes you just the right size. Everything counts, but the scale changes to something that makes much more sense. You face hard things. But you have already received something better which can never be taken away. And that better something will continue to work out the whole journey long.

The question generates a heartfelt response:

Bless the Lord, O my soul, and do not forget any of his benefits, who pardons all your iniquities and heals all your diseases, who redeems your life from the pit, who crowns you with lovingkindness and compassion, who satisfies your years with good things so that your youth is renewed like the eagle.

Thank you, my Father. You are able to give true voice to a thank you amid all that is truly wrong, both the sins and the sufferings that now have come under lovingkindness.

Finally, you are prepared to pose—and to mean—almost unimaginable questions:

Why not me?

Why not this?

Why not now?

If in some way, my faith might serve as a three-watt night-light in a very dark world, why not me?

If my suffering shows forth the Savior of the world, why not me?

If I have the privilege of filling up the sufferings of Christ?

If he sanctifies to me my deepest distress?

If I fear no evil?

If he bears me in his arms?

If my weakness demonstrates the power of God to save us from all that is wrong?

If my honest struggle shows other strugglers how to land on their feet?

If my life becomes a source of hope for others?

Why not me?

Of course, you don’t want to suffer, but you’ve become willing: “If it is possible, let this cup pass from me; yet not as I will, but as you will.”

Like him, your loud cries and tears will in fact be heard by the one who saves from death.

Like him, you will learn obedience through what you suffer.

Like him, you will sympathize with the weaknesses of others.

Like him, you will deal gently with the ignorant and wayward.

Like him, you will display faith to a faithless world, hope to a hopeless world, love to a loveless world, life to a dying world.

If all that God promises only comes true, then why not me?"

—David Powlison, “God’s Grace and Your Sufferings,” in Suffering and the Sovereignty of God (pp. 172-173).

HT: Between Two Worlds