About Me
- Rev. Spike
- Jesus Christ changed my life when I was 15 years old. I have given my life to proclaiming Him.
Saturday, December 27, 2008
Monday, August 25, 2008
Happy Birthday Ramen
An easily missed milestone occurred today as Ramen Noodles turned 50 years old. The creator of Ramen died this past January. Attendance at his funeral showed his country's appreciation for his accomplishments. I have likely consumed a pallet or more of his noodles in my lifetime (sometimes out of necessity; can I get an amen from the college crowd?). So listen here for a lighthearted look into the Ramen phenomenon and its impact on one NPR reporter.
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Homeschooling Under Fire in DC
Rev.
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Dear Honorable Legislators:
The District of Columbia is considering new regulations on homeschooling that would significantly alter the manner in which families practice home education. I am greatly concerned about the effect this may have within your own community, as well as the potential ripple effect throughout our great nation.
I was a truly reluctant convert to home schooling, yet after watching my children grow intellectually in our home I simply cannot see us doing it any other way. Our children have thrived in a homeschooling environment; they brim with confidence and have a deep love of learning. We are regularly complimented on our children's' academic and social skills. Regrettably, it seems that the exceptions rather than norms often garner the most attention. I wish that you could visit our home, or that of many other homeschooling families, to see the process at work.
Please work to preserve the rights of families in America who have chosen to be personally responsible for their families academic development. Homeschoolers can grow into exceptionally responsible and productive citizens just as well as those in the public school system.
Thank you for your time.
Respectfully,
Bro. J P Williams
Appleton City, MO
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Rick Warren: The Face of Evil?
While perusing some home school blogs, Vicki ran across a widely disseminated article featuring the 25 or so evils that Rick Warren's Purpose Driven model has foisted upon the unsuspecting American church. An example can be found here.
Here is the response I posted:
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Wow, I must have read a different book! I can't say that I saw any of this in anything of Warren's. Maybe, when I am fully initiated into his evil inner sanctum, then I will become completely enlightened to his subtle scheme of global domination...
When I was a kid we had a name for people who make a name for themselves knocking others down... "bullies".
Warren is a sound, orthodox expositor of the scriptures. He hits the proverbial nail on the head time after time on pertinent issues within the church. I mean seriously, the man tithes 90% of his income, has given his life to the service of Jesus Christ, and led countless thousands to a closer relationship with God. What am I missing here?
Rev.
**********
Granted, not the most level headed, thoughtful response, but I am so, SO tired of the volumes of NONSENSE that manage to get circulated online without even the most cursory evaluation.
If I believed everything I read online I would believe that:
e-mail will soon be taxed
it is illegal to say God on TV
Barak Obama is a closet Muslim extremist
that B arney is the anti-Christ, or maybe its Anderson Cooper or perhaps Brian McLaren!
a supercomputer in Belgium called "The Beast" has a record of every human being on the planet.
I hope you can see my point.
Rev.
Friday, May 23, 2008
Prince Caspian
I have to ask the same question that I asked after I saw TLWW: “What screen writer really thinks they are a better writer than CS Lewis!?”
Dialogue rarely comes from the book, and Lewis surely turned phrases better than “You’ve got to be kidding me… you’re it?” Also the chronology of the story is changed significantly, and a few important scenes and discussions are omitted completely, but hey, only nerds notice that sort of thing right?
On the up side (once I realized that the screen writers were wrestling with how to adapt a book that is nearly 1/3 omnipotent narration into film) I can say that the overarching Narian themes remain.
This is a decidedly more dark film, reflecting that period of the Narnian canon. I suspect that some who were uncomfortable about the mysticism and violence of TLWW may give up on the upcoming films. Personally, it will be a while before our kids see Caspian (just like they have yet to see Revenge of the Sith).
Thankfully the themes of chivalry and the importance of old stories thankfully were firmly intact. Hard questions are asked (and answered0 such as, “Is it ever right to do wrong to accomplish right?” Honor and tradition are also venerated; we must remember that Lewis speaks to us from the fissure between one society and an emerging one that he detested in many ways.
Overall, Caspian is no substitute for the book, but perhaps it will whet the whistle for a new generation of Lewis fans. Then again, Lewis hasn’t really needed their help before… great stories spread without much help.
Rev.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
C is for "Clink"
Apparently the quest to combat childhood obesity has in itself no sense of decency! That they would draft Cookie monster, surely under great compulsion, to sing not about macaroons and chocolate chips, but about carrots and potatoes. There are even rumblings about retiring the Cookie persona entirely in favor of the "Veggie Monster".
People who expect someone else to take responsibility for their own lack of child rearing skills astound me; consider this case of a family suing McDonald's a few years ago because their child was obese after eating their products every day, imagine that! I suppose that while I am on my soapbox... I recall a time when kids did extremely dangerous things like jumping on trampolines, shooting bb guns, camping, eating potato chips, and playing dodge ball. Today, some people won't even let their kids outside without hovering over their every step. I suppose that if these families ever starting hanging out, they'd probably try to have Cookie put in the clink!
I know that if I'd gone to grandma's and she handed me a plate of tofu turnovers I would blow a fuse. But since I am the scientific type, I wanted to give the project a chance so I asked my son (who had just finished watching the segment) if he wanted a cookie or a potato, to which he readily replied, "cookie!?"
You tell me.
Rev. Spike
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For a hilarious related article with similar reflections, see below:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/18/magazine/18wwln-medium-t.html?ref=magazine
The Word of the Day: Wait (or Farewell to Fillmore for Now)
Tuesday we went to Springfield MO to look at a beautiful van (see below) that we were almost certain that we would be buying. Everything seemed to be falling into place. The original price for the van was 19,000, they were running a sale at 16,000 and we were able to talk them down to 14,500. The rule of thumb for car lots is that they try to make 2000 per sale on pre-owned vehicles, so in essence, they were selling this to us darn near close to what they paid for it.
Perfect! um, right?
We called a few friends, you may have been one of them, and asked you to pray for wisdom. I jokingly asked a few of you to pray that if I was not meant to move forward on this purchase that I'd "feel like I was going to throw up". The strangest thing happened...
As we were driving to the lot that day I had butterflies in my stomach. I got about four hours of sleep Tuesday night. I was more stressed and unsettled than I have been since Finals Week 2006 (the year my hard drive bellied up a week before finals). By the time I had the paperwork in my hands at the bank yesterday I had an anvil in my stomach. It took me a bit, but between the general lack of peace and the wise council of a long trusted friend I finally understood that this was not the time to jump into this.
Two scriptures factor in here:
Cease striving and know that I am God;
I will be exalted among the nations , I will be exalted in the earth.
Psalms 46:10 (NASB)
The Hebrew word for "cease" is "raphah", which means to "sink, relax, or let go". Interesting. Cease is a much better translation than the NIV's "be still". The NLT takes it further with "be silent".
Second of all, a proverb:
For by wise guidance you will wage war,
And in abundance of counselors there is victory.
Prov 24:6 (NASB)
I know that some of my friends think I rely too much on the prayers and counsel of others, but folks, we need one another. I cannot tell you how many times a wise word had saved me from harm. Most often, that counsel simply affirms what you know you are supposed to do anyhow.
This wasn't a total waste. I finally learned the art of "dickering", I'm no longer afraid of appearing greedy or seedy when I talk to a salesperson. I also have less fear of disappointing people. Second, I have been reminded of the powerful hand of God.
For Your arrows have sunk deep into me,
And Your hand has pressed down on me.
Psalms 38:2 (NASB)
I can honestly say that Tuesday night I felt like God's hand was pressed squarely on my chest. The exact opposite of what you should "feel" when you are headed into something. Sure, you might be scared to death following God. A warrior, it is said, is no more brave than another man, he simply overcomes his fear to become a hero. Other times, you have to "follow your gut". I believe that is part of what God hardwired into us.
Musing over this, I am reminded of a Cool Hand Luke tune:
The Foster:
The wisest words I ever heard
Came with a gentle wind
Though it didn’t hit me then
It made no sound
‘Til no one was around
This it blew me to my knees
And handed me the keys
Go, just go where the peace is
You always know if you seek it
Go, just go where the peace is
You always know if you seek it
I know the truth
I can show it to you
Or anybody else
But can’t apply it to myself
I already know which way to go
If I stop and breathe the air
The answer is right there
Go, just go where the peace is
You always know if you seek it
Go, just go where the peace is
You always know if you seek it
You can fight
You can try with all your might
It may be the hardest thing
But it’s the only way to peace
Close your eyes
Count to ten
Take a deep breath and try again
You have access
By one Spirit
Go, just go where the peace is
You always know if you seek it
Go, just go where the peace is
You always know if you seek it
So there you have it. Hope you are helped by my embarrassing story :)
Rev.
Saturday, May 17, 2008
For Men Only (and curious wives and mothers)
No amount of "protection" can circumvent a lack of self-control; however, if you are the sort that needs a little help (which if we are honest with ourselves would likely include every man reading this) please let me offer some.
Below are the urls to two very helpful programs.
x3 Watch available here is accountability software which monitors your internet traffic and periodically sends an e-mail to two buddies who can then come and break your modem in half before your unclean eyes should you find yourself in compromising territory (and don't try to lie, we know it didn't just "pop up", this isn't 1998...) Feel free to put me down as one of your accountability partners, I will gladly break your modem for you if needed.
Naomi is a sweet little program that automatically closes your browser if you find yourself in "no-no" territory. The sweet thing about this application is that it has a heuristic analysis which reads the content of pages and if it recognizes something that you (or your kids, or anyone else using your machine) should not be looking at it goes into action. Youth Pastors and 'evil' parents (like me) who want their kids' to never have any fun will also be glad to know that it can block MySpace and image searches.
Please, from a man who has been down this road many times, know that the Enemy only asks for an inch, then he takes a mile. I will post some more tips in the future.
For the men out there (yes, both of you) who have never faced sexual temptation on the internet, we're happy for you, now shut up and pray for the rest of us.
Monday, May 12, 2008
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Friday, May 9, 2008
Reading List Time
Jesus Among Other Gods, Ravi Zacharias
Galatians: Ben Witherington III
Longenecker (WBC)
J L Martyn (Anchor Bible)
JD Dunn (Black's Comm on the NT)
Timothy George (NAC)
A New Kind of Christian, Brian McLaren
Following Jesus, Tom (NT) Wright
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
The Church: A Sinking Ship?
A dear missionary friend of mine asked me to read Brian Mc Laren's "New Kind of Christian". Mc Laren brilliantly packages his dissertation as a narrative where two men dialogue about the demise of all aspects of modernity (including modern Christianity). Yet, if the first fourth of a book is like the first five minutes of a movie, I have already figured out the ending.
Regardless of how he packages it, I suggest that his "arguments" thus far could be more appropriately dubbed observations. He seems to fall into the same iconoclastic rut most postmodern authors do: the kind that leaves a vacuum. Perhaps giving us guidance on how to proceed might be misconstrued as linear, modern thinking, yet to be fair I have not finished the book.
I think that I have read most of what Mc Laren is going to say in other texts like Barna's certificate of divorce from the modern church, "Revolution" as well as other texts I have not read like Sweet's "Soul Tsunami".
As much as I bristle against fundamentalism (a violent reaction to a world that appears to be spinning out of control) I find Mc Laren and Rob Bell's view of the world equally unpalatable.
I am beginning to feel like a man without a country.
I have often described myself as something of an "theological and ecclesiastical mutt". At bottom, I am a true Baptist insomuch that I adhere to the truly fundamental precepts of the Baptist views of congregational polity, immersion baptism, the Lord's Supper, authority and perspicuity of scripture, salvation by grace through faith. While I might diverge a bit in soteriology and quite a bit in eschatology I doubt I would ever challenge the rudiments of faith in the same way I see the Emergent Movement doing. Perhaps this makes me an unthinking drone. I tend to think it makes me solid.
What am I getting at?
There is "asking questions", and then there is "questioning". One stems from a genuine quest to re-imagine, and the other from a desire for "image". The EC camp seems to be getting off on the "cool factor" of asking "hard questions" and at times trying to be savvy simply by making nonsensical statements akin to the Medieval models of philosophy: people saying things like "it is impossible, therefore it must be true (Origen)". They seem to live, not on any cogent concepts of how we are to advance in this new age, but essentially on "schlock value".
Bell is creative, but apparently doesn't check his sources very well. For instance, in his film "Dust" he makes several unverifiable claims about the training of rabbis in the Second Temple period, such as that they had to memorize the entire Torah, a claim that I have never encountered in over a decade of study on the inter-testamental period (although I am hardly an expert). The trouble is, this makes him look like a fool; so unfortunately the things he does have to offer are lost in the mixture of fact and fiction. Although in that particular film, I seriously question his conclusion that Peter's problem was self-doubt.
Mc Laren recently came under fire, and I think rightfully so, for comments made at a recent gathering of student ministers where he stated that we should be less focused on eternity and try to direct students more toward social justice as a way to work out there faith. I think this is as inaccurate a position as what we might see from the modern fundamentalist movements.
The EC is in constant transition. Who knows where it will land, and what effect it will ultimately have. Yet, we have to understand a few things about the EC and the Postmodern (PM) worldview before we can even begin talking about them.
First off, there have always been EC and PM movements. Take Luther and Calvin for instance. They were both forward thinking and challenged their contemporary ecclesiologies; both in practice and theology. Mc Laren makes good points in his chapter about world views, citing Lewis (another PM thinker) that any Christian who believed that the Pope was not necessary would have been declared a heretic four hundred years ago. Yet today, half or more of the world's Christians have no sense of allegiance to the Pope what-so-ever. In other words, anyone who looks at a current system and says, "we can do this better" is by definition "post modern". This is partly because post modernism is "psycographic" (thought defined) not "demographic" (age and class defined). For instance, I would argue that my old philosophy professor, Dan Cochran was vastly more effectively postmodern than Rob Bell.
So, the question that I have to ask after this gruelingly long, "scrabble word" laden introduction is this:
Is the modern church a sinking ship?
Can we definitively say that it is time to cast out the last two thousand years of orthopraxy and even elements we have determined necessary to orthodoxy to keep the church alive?
I will not give more away on my view, but I hope you will give yours away. d
Monday, May 5, 2008
$3 Worth of God
It has been said that too many Americans have been innoculated with a slight case of Christianity that is preventing them from getting the real thing. Perhaps this has something to do with how much of God people really want. Here is a quote from Wilbur Rees to make you think:
"I would like to buy $3 worth of God, please - not enough to
explode my soul or disturb my sleep, but just enough to equal a cup of
warm milk or a snooze in the sunshine. I don't want enough of him to make
me love a foreigner or pick beets with a migrant worker. I want ecstasy,
not transformation; I want the warmth of a womb, not a new birth. I want
a pound of the Eternal in a paper sack. I'd like to buy $3 worth of God,
please."
I especially like the line 'I want the warmth of the womb, not a new birth'. This, I am afraid, is exactly what people want out of their worship and church experiences. Not something that demands them to pick up a cross, make major sacrifices and follow Jesus. Rather, they want something that makes them comfortable with who they already are and how they already are. They want acceptance as they are, not repentance so they can be who they ought to be. Think on these things.
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
GTA 4
Thursday, April 24, 2008
The Love of Christ: JM Campbell
14 For the love of Christ controls us, having concluded this, that one died for all, therefore all died; 15 and He died for all, so that they who live might no longer live for themselves, but for Him who died and rose again on their behalf.
2 Cor 5:14-15 (NASB)
The love of Christ is too large for any heart to hold it. It will overflow into others' hearts: it will give itself out, give itself away, for the enriching of other lives. The heart of Christ is a costly thing for anyone to have. It will lead those who have it where it led Him. If it cost Him the cross it will cost them no less.
J.M. Campbell
from: Thoughts for the Quiet Heart, ed. D.L. Moody
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Irreducible Complexity
John 1:40-42 (NASB)
There are times when a message is so obvious that we miss it.
A few years ago Vicki and I were blessed to attend the Billy Graham School of Evangelism (it was in Lenexa that year near an excellent Indian restaurant named Korma Sutra). One of the evangelism strategies discussed was called "Operation Andrew", it is a painfully simple strategy. Your church sets up an evangelistic event, even as simple as an evangelistic sermon, and you ask someone to come with you. What a novel concept!
I already hear the objections about how bringing someone to church is not beinging them to Jesus. I would urge you to shut down your critical apparatus for a few moments though and dwell on the simplicity of this passage.
Andrew met Jesus, fell in love with the man and the plan, and told someone else that he loved about Jesus.
Talk about irreducible complexity.
Andrew gives us another encouraging example in that he's willing to share his faith in the most threatening of environments. Jesus taught that a prophet was without honor in his hometown; but then, there is your very home.
Anyone who has family members who are not disciples knows that sharing faith with your family can be a hard road, regardless of how good those relationships are. They know everything about you, and that makes things complicated in a hurry.
Yet Andrew was so blown away by what Jesus said and did that he couldn't help himself! It is an example that can encourage us all.
Just tell the people you love about the One that you love the most. As Chris Saey related, "Tell God's story."
Grace and peace,
Rev.
Monday, April 21, 2008
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
A Dangerous Prayer: Psalm 26:2
Examine me, O Lord, and try me; Test my mind and my heart.
Psalm 26:2
God, like a skillful surgeon, can always get to the heart of the problem. But he will only operate with consent. There is truth in the wise old Baptist saying that “the Holy Spirit is a gentleman”, how else could one resist the Holy Spirit (Acts 7)?
You may have heard before that the trouble with living sacrifices is that they crawl off the altar. I think this is the wisdom of Kieth Green, passed to Steve Camp and or Rich Mullins, and finally to Derek Webb; but whoever coined it, it is very very true.
Why is this prayer so dangerous? Well, you tell me?
O righteous God,
who searches minds and hearts,
bring to an end the violence of the wicked
and make the righteous secure.Psalms 7:9 (NIV) (cf. Rev 2)
Examining, searching... what will He find? Will I be numbered among the righteous and vindicated or among the wicked?
See if there is any offensive [KJV, wicked; NASB, hurtful] way in me,
and lead me in the way everlasting.Psalms 139:24 (NIV)
ANY offensive way? Wow, it shouldn't take long to find something... When I open myself up to God in that way, things could get messy in a hurry. What if He tells me to stop something that I am doing: a relationship, a dream, a career path, a habit, an indulgence? Or worse yet, what if He tells me to start doing something: a ministry, a witness, to become a tither, a children's worker, a follower instead of an admirer of the Gospel? What if God really “gets into my business”?
I love to tell stories on myself. When Vicki and I were first married, I began to realize in a hurry that the marriage of two “only children” might have been a mistake! Our first real disagreement was about whether to put a set of jars we were given on the counter, or in the cabinet. This skirmish carried on for weeks, until finally one, or both of us, surrendered. Ironically, I think those jars were sold in our last garage sale. We had to learn to share space, share a checkbook, and so on. As they say, you have to endure the process to get the product. Some came along easier than others, but the process of becoming one flesh was painful for us, but well worth it.
Granted, the images associated with the work of God in our lives are not always pleasant. But the process is so necessary.
"But who can endure the day of His coming? And who can stand when He appears? For He is like a refiner's fire and like fullers ' soap.
Mal 3:2 (NASB)
But the vessel that he was making of clay was spoiled in the hand of the potter; so he remade, it into another vessel, as it pleased, the potter to make.
Jer 18:4 (NASB)
For Your arrows have sunk deep into me,
And Your hand has pressed down on me.
Psalms 38:2 (NASB)
There is nothing more fearsome than facing yourself... but thank God you are not alone if you do.
Monday, March 31, 2008
Heaven on Earth
http://youtube.com/watch?v=AA0NLb0pXGI
Rev.
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Christ in the Wilderness
Welcome to my world... a picture is worth a thousand words.
"Christ in the Wilderness" by Ivan Kramskoi
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Short Comings?
Now I admit, that is sort of funny, but certainly not Godly.
The more I think about it, the more it bugs me. Partly because the singer is known as ”that Christian guy I such-and-such band...” but moreover because I suppose that I naively assumed that people still treat one another with dignity and respect. To turn the other cheek. To not let the jerks get the best of them. Now, someone might say, “Well, lets talk about your short comings!?” Indeed, and that is the other thing that is bugging me. I will be the first to tell you that (at least at times) I easily rank up with Samson, Peter, and Judas (in no particular order).
As Derek Webb once spun:
My life looks good I do confess, you can ask anyone
just don’t ask my real good friends
because they will lie to you
or worse, they’ll tell the truth
This is not to say that I am deliberate and flagrant hypocrite. Simply to note my own imperfections. I have always been clear with my friends, and my church that I have failed many times in my walk with God and will fail many more. As it is written:
For a righteous man falls seven times, and rises again,
But the wicked stumble in time of calamity.
Prov 24:16 (NASB)
A wise man once pointed out to me that the righteous man is not one who does not fall, but one who continues to rise again in God's strength (a sort of moral resurrection). I have had a rough few days. Truth be told, I did not entirely realize how rough they had been until today. So, to my wife and anyone else who has endured the brunt of my inadequacies, please know that I am sorry.
So what does all this have to do with that band? I don't know. I guess that I am ashamed that I would appreciate/support a band that were a bunch of jerks (the same reason my hands will shake if I punch the chad for Mr. McCain, you know, he seems like a real jerk sometimes...) . Maybe these are ways that God continually opens my eyes to the lostness of this world, that is, by my own sin and the sins of others. Perhaps at bottom the issue is that I should be as shocked/disappointed at my own sin. Funny how our sins are always more respectable and less severe than the sins of others (although I don't feel like I struggle there as much as I used to).
A friend has pointed out how readily we might preach against “despicable sins” (and there ARE degreesi) while leaving ours “respectable sins” untouched. Then, there are those (Augustine?) who use the pulpit or the Sunday School to lapse into some sort of physco-epiphinal catharsis. But ultimately, we should revel in the grace of God. That He chose to rescue us. To redeem and save us. To wash us up. God knows that I need it.
So, I guess it is a good thing that I had that disappointing moment, my own and seeing the singer blow it. Maybe, just maybe, it will help me keep my act together. In the meantime, I will stare into the mirror of the Word and hope that I can bear what I see a little more each day. God, help me to be as patient with myself as You are. Amen.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Obama: Sermon on Mount Justifies Same-Sex Unions
Editor in Chief
(CNSNews.com) - Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) told a crowd at Hocking College in Nelsonville, Ohio, Sunday that he believes the Sermon on the Mount justifies his support for legal recognition of same-sex unions. He also told the crowd that his position in favor of legalized abortion does not make him "less Christian."
"I don't think it [a same-sex union] should be called marriage, but I think that it is a legal right that they should have that is recognized by the state," said Obama. "If people find that controversial then I would just refer them to the Sermon on the Mount, which I think is, in my mind, for my faith, more central than an obscure passage in Romans." ((Hear audio from WTAP-TV)) St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans condemns homosexual acts as unnatural and sinful.
Obama's mention of the Sermon on the Mount in justifying legal recognition of same-sex unions may have been a reference to the Golden Rule: "Do to others what you would have them do to you." Or it may have been a reference to another famous line: "Do not judge, or you too will be judged."
The Sermon, recorded in the Gospel of Matthew, includes the Lord's Prayer, the Beatitudes, an endorsement of scriptural moral commandments ("anyone who breaks one of the least of these commandments and teaches others to do the same will be called least in the kingdom of heaven"), and condemnations of murder, divorce and adultery. It also includes a warning: "Watch out for false prophets. They come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ferocious wolves."
The passage from St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans, which Obama dismissed as "obscure," discusses people who knew God but turned against him.
"They exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served created things rather than the Creator--who is forever praised," wrote St. Paul. "Because of this, God gave them over to shameful lusts. Even their women exchanged natural relations for unnatural ones. In the same way the men also abandoned natural relations with women and were inflamed with lust for one another. Men committed indecent acts with other men, and received in themselves the due penalty for their perversion."
On the topic of abortion, Obama said his support for keeping it legal does not trespass on his Christian faith.
"I think that the bottom line is that in the end, I think women, in consultation with their pastors, and their doctors, and their family, are in a better position to make these decisions than some bureaucrat in Washington. That's my view," Obama said about abortion. "Again, I respect people who may disagree, but I certainly don't think it makes me less Christian. Okay." (Hear audio from WTAP-TV)
Obama opened his town-hall-type meeting at the college with a short speech and then provided lengthy answers to a handful of questions. One questioner, Leon Forte, a Protestant clergyman, asked Obama about evangelical Christians who were concerned about his position on issues that conservatives consider "litmus tests."
"Your campaign sets a quandary for most evangelical Christians because I believe that they believe in the social agenda that you have, but they have a problem in what the conservatives have laid out as the moral litmus tests as to who is worthy and who is not," said Forte. "So, I will ask you to speak to those two questions."(See transcript)
Obama volunteered that he believed Forte was talking about abortion and homosexual marriage, and then he gave answers on both issues that were not as explicit as positions he has staked out on these issues in other venues. Last Thursday, for example, as reported by Cybercast News Service, Obama published on his Web site an "open letter concerning LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender) equality in America."
In that letter, Obama said he favored same-sex unions that were equal to marriage--including adoption rights--and that he was open to states codifying same-sex marriages.
"As your President, I will use the bully pulpit to urge states to treat same-sex couples with full equality in their family and adoption laws," Obama said in the letter. "I personally believe that civil unions represent the best way to secure that equal treatment. But I also believe that the federal government should not stand in the way of states that want to decide on their own how best to pursue equality for gay and lesbian couples--whether that means a domestic partnership, a civil union, or a civil marriage."
In Ohio on Sunday, before mentioning the Sermon on the Mount, Obama insisted he was against "gay marriage" and did not mention his support for allowing same-sex couples to adopt children and have the same "family" status as heterosexual couples.
"I will tell you that I don't believe in gay marriage, but I do think that people who are gay and lesbian should be treated with dignity and respect and that the state should not discriminate against them," said Obama on Sunday. "So, I believe in civil unions that allow a same-sex couple to visit each other in a hospital or transfer property to each other. I don't think it should be called marriage, but I think that it is a legal right that they should have that is recognized by the state. If people find that controversial then I would just refer them to the Sermon on the Mount, which I think is, in my mind, for my faith, more central than an obscure passage in Romans. That's my view."
Obama also has been more aggressive in framing his pro-abortion position previously than he was on Sunday. When he was in the Illinois Senate, for example, he repeatedly opposed a bill that would have defined as a "person" a baby who had survived an induced-labor abortion and was born alive.
In a 2001 Illinois Senate floor speech about that bill, he argued that to call a baby who survived an abortion a "person" would give it equal protection rights under the 14th Amendment and would give credibility to the argument that the same child inside its mother's womb was also a "person" and thus could not be aborted.
When the Illinois Senate bill was amended to make it identical to a federal law that included language to protect Roe v. Wade--and that the U.S. Senate voted unanimously to pass--Obama still opposed the bill, voting it down in the Illinois Senate committee he chaired.
Yet, in Ohio on Sunday, Obama depicted abortion as a tragedy to be avoided, while being kept legal.
"On the issue of abortion, that is always a tragic and painful issue," he said. "I think it is always tragic, and we should prevent it as much as possible .... But I think that the bottom line is that in the end, I think women, in consultation with their pastors, and their doctors, and their family, are in a better position to make these decisions than some bureaucrat in Washington. That's my view. Again, I respect people who may disagree, but I certainly don't think it makes me less Christian. Okay."
Before discussing his views on same-sex unions and abortion, Obama told the crowd he was a "devout Christian."
"In terms of my faith, there has been so much confusion that has been deliberately perpetrated through emails and so forth, so here are the simple facts," he said. "I am a Christian. I am a devout Christian. I have been a member of the same church for 20 years, pray to Jesus every night, and try to go to church as much as I can when they are not working me. Used to go quite often.
"These days, we haven't been at the home church--I haven't been home on Sunday--for several months now. So, my faith is important to me. It is not something that I try to push on other people. But it is something that helps to guide my life and my values."
Monday, March 10, 2008
HOME
Rev.
Friday, March 7, 2008
Update:
Hope all is well where you are. See you soon.
JP
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Mom in Hospital in MI
Thank you to my supportive friends and church family for their encouragement and support.
JP
Friday, February 29, 2008
You Know the Economy is in Peril When...
Jackson
As of January 17, Michael Jackson had $153,910 missed payments on a home used by his family.
Documents filed with the Los Angeles County Recorder's Office indicate the reclusive pop star was most recently in default last month on the property in Encino, an area in the San Fernando Valley.
The singer had $153,910 in missed payments as of January 17 on a $4 million loan serviced by Pasadena-based mortgage lender IndyMac Bancorp. Documents dated February 7 show the notice of default was withdrawn.
Documents also show Jackson previously faced possible default over missed payments on the home in April and August.
A spokeswoman for Jackson did not immediately return a call for comment.
Jackson's Neverland property in Los Olivos, California, is set to be auctioned off March 19 because of missed payments on a $24.5 million loan
Saturday, February 23, 2008
What Hath God Wrought?
Friday, February 22, 2008
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
The Chicken Soup for the Soul Gospel
2 Tim 4:3 (NIV)
Remember Chicken Soup for the Soul? They teemed with pith and whit sandwiched between op-ed pieces, urban legends, and heartwarming biographical sketches. They were the ultimate feel good book, what people read before they discovered the "Forward" button on their browser. They are good reading; uplifting, inspirational, sometimes challenging, but they have lousy theology.
Now, someone might say, "But they don't claim to be theological texts!" True, but once you start talking about Heaven and Hell, reincarnation, feeding the poor, war and peace, etc. then like it or not you are doing theology. Furthermore, once you publish your work, you have opened it to scrutiny like putting their child on stage at a recital.
I worked in a Christian bookstore back then and when we began to read them and it wasn't long before we stopped ordering them. In a nutshell they teach that you should be good and when you die fat angel babies will take you to cloud nine where you will play a harp for all time. The American Media Machine spews tons of bad theology every day. If you die with unfinished business you might linger as a ghost until things are set right. You might even get another chance at life to straighten things out if your good and bad deeds are "tied". Maybe we all live in a big computer?
Confused yet? Exactly. It is because the CSFS books, Oprah, Hollywood, and the whole group hug movement have at least one thing in common: terrible theology. And if the root is bad.... Some of it may be defined as searching, but at bottom the world offers false hope, false security. It offers something that cannot be: a hope for happiness and Heaven apart from Christ. To quote Lewis, "God cannot give us a happiness and peace apart from Himself, because it is not there. There is no such thing." Yet folks want to be affirmed, uplifted, and caressed, they want to feel spiritual. There is a longing in the human heart for God, but not the God of America:
1 But realize this, that in the last days difficult times will come. 2 For men will be lovers of self, lovers of money, boastful, arrogant, revilers, disobedient to parents, ungrateful, unholy, 3 unloving, irreconcilable, malicious gossips, without self-control, brutal, haters of good, 4 treacherous, reckless, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, 5 holding to a form of godliness , although they have denied its power; Avoid such men as these...
2 Tim 3:1-6 (NASB)
On the positive side, Oprah did help me discover the Neti pot. She helps people stop smoking, to lose weight and to have better buns; and gave us Dr. Phil (who I still like, a lot). She feeds the poor and clothes the naked. And to some estimates seems to do a lot more good than many orthodox Christians. So we have lost people doing good works while saved people do nothing. Problem? I think so.
It is abundantly clear that people are longing for God. Someone has to get out there and tell the truth. Whether it is engaging in media or sharing the savior at Starbucks, it has to happen. Someone has to shine light in the darkness. But many Christians don't seem to realize how dark a world they are living in. Furthermore we tend to lap it up thoughtlessly like the next fellow. In the name of tolerance and dialogue Christians have lost their minds and their spines.
So what's a Christian to do? Paul tells us:
1 In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and in view of his appearing and his kingdom, I give you this charge: 2 Preach the Word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage--with great patience and careful instruction. 3 For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. 4 They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths. 5 But you, keep your head in all situations, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, discharge all the duties of your ministry.
2 Tim 4:1-5 (NIV)
Whose ministry? In context it is Timothy's, but in reality it belongs to all of us. And don't think that Paul wants you to only contribute your mouth. The gospel is preached with both the mouth and the hands and feet. Someone has once said, "I'd rather see a sermon than to hear one". Duly noted.
Children beware, counterfeits abound. Christians should be careful what they accept as truth. We tend to take things in with an uncritical mind while at once we have hardened hearts. That friends is the work of the Devil. We are to be about the work of Jesus. The world is hungry, ready, so what are they going to have to eat?
Sunday, February 17, 2008
Madmen
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Valentine's Day
St. Valentine
At least three different Saint Valentines, all of them martyrs, are mentioned in the early martyrologies under date of 14 February. One is described as a priest at Rome, another as bishop of Interamna (modern Terni), and these two seem both to have suffered in the second half of the third century and to have been buried on the Flaminian Way, but at different distances from the city. In William of Malmesbury's time what was known to the ancients as the Flaminian Gate of Rome and is now the Porta del Popolo, was called the Gate of St. Valentine. The name seems to have been taken from a small church dedicated to the saint which was in the immediate neighborhood. Of both these St. Valentines some sort of Acta are preserved but they are of relatively late date and of no historical value. Of the third Saint Valentine, who suffered in Africa with a number of companions, nothing further is known.
Saint Valentine's Day
The popular customs associated with Saint Valentine's Day undoubtedly had their origin in a conventional belief generally received in England and France during the Middle Ages, that on 14 February, i.e. half way through the second month of the year, the birds began to pair. Thus in Chaucer's Parliament of Foules we read:
For this was sent on Seynt Valentyne's day
Whan every foul cometh ther to choose his mate.
For this reason the day was looked upon as specially consecrated to lovers and as a proper occasion for writing love letters and sending lovers' tokens. Both the French and English literatures of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries contain allusions to the practice. Perhaps the earliest to be found is in the 34th and 35th Ballades of the bilingual poet, John Gower, written in French; but Lydgate and Clauvowe supply other examples. Those who chose each other under these circumstances seem to have been called by each other their Valentines. In the Paston Letters, Dame Elizabeth Brews writes thus about a match she hopes to make for her daughter (we modernize the spelling), addressing the favoured suitor:
And, cousin mine, upon Monday is Saint Valentine's Day and every bird chooses himself a mate, and if it like you to come on Thursday night, and make provision that you may abide till then, I trust to God that ye shall speak to my husband and I shall pray that we may bring the matter to a conclusion.Shortly after the young lady herself wrote a letter to the same man addressing it "Unto my rightwell beloved Valentine, John Paston Esquire". The custom of choosing and sending valentines has of late years fallen into comparative desuetude.
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Saturday, February 9, 2008
Journal of a Junkie
Nothing really "bad" happened, but I was just constantly interrupted (and not the divine appointment type of interruptions). There is this episode of Cedric the Entertainer where he talks about how he has to watch a movie, have a sandwich, take a nap etc. before he gets to work on his comedy routines. Well, I'm not exactly the same, but close. When inspiration strikes, I hit the ground running and, if all is well, I will marathon to completion but every time I lose momentum (or run out of coffee!) it takes me a good while to get back on track.
I used to fill in the time where I was "waiting" to find my groove with gaming. As you can imagine, it took a LONG time sometimes to get back to work. Furthermore, when I was discouraged, or frustrated, like Friday; I would turn to gaming when what I should have done was prayed or read my Bible. In my darkest hours I would find myself in my office studying (playing catch-up) while my kids played outside because I had wasted hours throughout the week.
This last two weeks I was caught up enough to take the day off on Monday and today I took my family to a national park. Last Saturday, I went out and played football with my kids (they won most of the time). How many times have I missed that opportunity? Firday I also called my mom and I've found time to start reading some of those books and articles that have been sitting around for a million years (give or take...) and caught up on my Lostpedia reading.
In short, I do not believe that video games are evil, but I can tell you that I have only missed them one time. About ten minutes before I went out to play football I had what I could only refer to as "gamers withdrawal". I honestly had a moment of DT, like, what do I do now!? I have time on my hands!?!?! That leads me to my next battleground: YouTube, perhaps the greatest threat to productivity ever foisted upon unsuspecting ADHD types like myself.
Rev.
Thursday, February 7, 2008
Spirits of the Age by Joe Belz
JP
_________________________________________________
The decline of secularism brings a new set of challenges | Joel Belz
If you think that secular humanism has become biblical Christianity's most threatening opponent in contemporary society, Peter Jones wants you to think again. He will tell you—politely but emphatically—that you're at least a decade or two behind the curve.
Secular humanism boasts that it is void of explicit spiritual content—and in a way, Jones says, it has lived up to that promise. But in featuring such emptiness, it has left a globe full of people with vacant hearts and minds craving even a little spiritual substance. And that hunger, in turn, has turned its victims into prime candidates for what Jones calls "neo-pagan spirituality." It is all the rage.
Secular humanism deliberately steers you away from thinking "religiously" or "spiritually." But neo-paganism wears spirituality on its sleeve. And the evidence suggests that people—in all times and in all places—prefer a form of godliness to no godliness at all.
To understand that phenomenon better, Jones a couple of weeks ago assembled a quiet gathering of about 50 folks from all walks of life for a three-day discussion near San Diego, Calif. Right up front, the former Westminster Seminary professor acknowledged that for a long time serious social observers and philosophers have been claiming the final victory of secularism and the disappearance of religion. But they are wrong. Even the Chronicle of Higher Education, Jones pointed out, carried an article last year titled "Secularism in the Elimination Round."
Sadly, Jones stresses, it's not the success of biblical Christianity that gets credit for the waning of secularism. Taking secularism's place instead is a fascination with religions old and new—and usually altogether false. A typical example is the wild allure of Dan Brown's best-selling The Da Vinci Code.
Affecting far more people than Brown's 2003 work of fiction and the movie that followed the book are historic but pagan religions in places like China, India, Africa, and many parts of the new world as well. At the California conference, for example, China observer Sam Ling stressed that while the growth of Christianity in China is a fact—and that this huge nation once given up to Marxist atheism is now home to tens of millions of Christians—the fastest-growing religions in China right now are Buddhism and Taoism, whose adherents are numbered in the hundreds of millions.
Indian lecturer Vishal Mangalwadi, on the other hand—fresh off a recent two-week discussion with the grandson of Mahatma Gandhi—stepped conferees through the dark netherworld of the Hindu involvement with tantric sex. In such a worldview, which Mangalwadi says has taken Hindu themes around the globe, sexual experience is portrayed as an ultimate means of salvation. The main goal of sex is "gnosis," or knowing in the way God knows.
From Islam came frightening themes. That religion's emphasis on "subjugating the enemy"—whether a foreign power or your own wife—seems strangely to be attracting the interest even of non-Muslims around the world. From Africa comes word of reversion to witchcraft and darkly pagan practices. If these packages come wrapped with superstition and even violence, so be it. Conferees heard from a former practicing astrologer who described some of the inroads that field is making even into evangelical churches. And they heard how pagan spirituality has wormed its way into both modern feminism and the ecological movement.
Jones calls it neo-paganism. Around the world, in dozens of shapes, names, and forms, it is winning the allegiance and hearts especially of young people who are already disillusioned with the empty promises of secularism and materialism. The idea of the supernatural no longer bothers or embarrasses them. They want to know there is something more "out there," and they are willing to explore bizarre realities to find whatever it might be.
In an age when Christians have too often busied themselves providing good answers to all the wrong questions, a lesson from Peter Jones just might be an efficient use of everybody's time.
If you have a question or comment for Joel Belz, send it to jbelz@worldmag.com
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
The Overstock.com Chronicles: Episode II: Definitely Robot
Chat InformationWelcome to Overstock.com Customer Service, you are now chatting with Jermaine.
Jermaine: Thanks for visiting Overstock.com, this is Jermaine. How can I help you?
you: Invoice 61007459 [Incident: 080131-002652]
Jermaine: Hi, how can I help you?
you: I would like to talk to you about the above incident.
Jermaine: Ok, I'll check on the incident.
Jermaine: For security purposes, can you verify the full name and complete billing address on the account?
you: XXXXXXXXXXX
Jermaine: Thanks for verifying. Are you referring to the 'Motorola H700 Silver Bluetooth Headset'?
you: Yes
Jermaine: I understand that you are concern regarding the charge for the replacement item, which would occur on 02/07/2008 as the original item hasn't been returned back to us within given timeframe.
Jermaine: As per the notes on your account, I see that you had returned the replacement item via USPS.
Jermaine: May I have the return tracking number?
you: I have a reciept
you: It was mailed on 1/23/2008
you: at 10:16:02 AM
you: It is headed to Brooklyn NY 11219-3823
{about now, I checked my e-mail}
Jermaine: Ok, thanks for that information. Do you have the return tracking number or the delivery confirmation number for the returned package?
you: I did not receive a tracking number from OVerstock
you: You never sent a return label
you: You just sent out a new headset
Jermaine: Well, your account shows that we had emailed a free shipping label to you on 01/01/2008. It is unfortunate that you didn't receive it.
you: Yes, unfortunate
you: I sent back the new headset
Jermaine: We need the return tracking/delivery confirmation number for your package. Please contact USPS and get this information for us.
you: I kept the old one
you: There is no return label
you: You will receive a package from me, you should have already received it
you: I sent it almost two weeks ago
{At this point I got to check the weather... }
Jermaine: I do understand your concern, however, as per our records, we haven't received the item yet. We need this information to check when the item was delivered to us, if it was delivered.
Jermaine: We'll not be able to complete the return for your item without the return tracking information.
you: ...
you: So what you are saying is this:
you: Even though Overstock.com did not send me a return label, I am going to be charged for an item that I returned to you?
Jermaine: Well, we had sent a free shipping label to you. We can try to complete the return for your item, once you provide us the return tracking number for it.
you: Well, I do not have a tracking number, because I never received an return invoice, return sticker, or anything
you: So, I sent back the item to you, on my dime, and figured that once you received the package you could scan it into your system and connect the dots
you: Hey look, the same item in the same package we mailed it in, with the original UPS labels!
Jermaine: You still have the receipt for the return package. You can contact USPS with the receipt and ask for return tracking/delivery confirmation number for your package.
you: All I have is a receipt with a "Bill " on it.
you: I will contact them and see what I can do.
Jermaine: Once you have this information, please provide it to us so that we can try to complete the return for your item.
Jermaine: Do you have any other question for me?
you: This has not been the best customer service expirience I have had
Jermaine: I am sorry you feel this way.
you: I realize that you are just doing what you're supposed to
you: I really hope we can work this out.
Jermaine: I understand your disappointment at this point of time. I would have also felt the same way if I were in your place.
Jermaine: Is there anything else I can help you with?
you: Just don't charge my account for something I sent back
d your point and we'll extend the return deadline by 15 days for this item as an exception. However, if you are unable to provide us the return tracking information for your item within the extended return timeframe, your card will be charged for the replacement item.
you: Okay, but this is problem.
you: I did not purchase delivery confirmation, and I did not have an envelope to use from you guys
you: The item I received did not come with a return label, nor did I receive one in advance of receiving the replacement item
you: We'll see what happens.
you: Thank you for your time.
Jermaine: You may ask for a proof of delivery from USPS for your item.
Jermaine: We appreciate your understanding in this regard.
Jermaine: Would you like to know anything else?
you: Nope.
you: Thanks.
Jermaine: Thank you again for visiting Overstock.com. Have a great day.
Chat InformationChat session has been terminated by the Overstock Service representative.
Sunday, February 3, 2008
ANOTHER GOSPEL
Galatians 1:6-9
The Bible is a big book. There is room for opinion. In part, this is why we have so many denominations (more than 60 Baptist groups alone). There are things that we can agree on, and things that we can agree to disagree on (without being disagreeable). However, there are some things that the American Church has to take another look at.
In recent years by we have found ourselves fascinated by the emergence of so called hidden (repressed) "Gospels" purporting to give us the "real story" of the life of Christ and the Early Church. The Gospel of Thomas, and of Judas caused great media fervor a few years ago. Most orthodox Christians rightfully reject such texts as spurious fabrications and dismiss them as nonsense. Perhaps there is a level at which we should engage these texts, if for no other reason, to be aware of divergent traditions that emerged along side the Orthodox Church (by this I mean doctrinally sound) at any given historical juncture, but that is not what we are here to discuss today.
The Da Vinci Code caused a great stir and has now been all but forgotten. The fear with which many Christians seemed to grasp their pews was quite disturbing. It was as if they expected a mass apostasy from the result of a work fiction. Someone presenting the "real truth" about the Gospel is no new thing. As far back as the Garden in Eden we have found the serpent whispering in our ear that God is holding out on us, keeping something important back from us; and time and time again the consequences have demonstrated otherwise. But Americans love a good conspiracy theory; an underdog story. We are always ready to believe that someone out there might have something that survived a cover up.
In Paul's case the problem was obvious. Luke tells us in Acts 15:36-18:22 that Paul journeyed to the region of Galatia on his second missionary journey. Lasting about four years; he spent half founding churches in Galatia, Philippi, and Thessalonica and the other half in Corinth. Galatians 4:13-16 tells us that Paul first shared the Gospel with the Galatians because of an illness. They received the message with great eagerness; forming a deep bond with Paul. But by the time Paul writes to them, the situation is clearly different.
I am amazed that you are so quickly deserting Him who called you by the grace of Christ for another Gospel, which is really not another; only there are some who are disturbing you and want to distort the Gospel of Christ.
We do not immediately know what this gospel is, although later we are told that it is a Gospel of Jesus + Adherence to the Law =Salvation. For Jewish Christians, this means returning to ancient practices such as feast days and Sabbaths, simply retrofitting their new found Christianity to their spiritual upbringing. For Gentiles (non-Jews) who came into the Kingdom, this means fulfilling all the requirements of the Abrahamic covenant and then obeying the Mosaic Law as well; all 613 commandments. It seems that these teachings came from folks who trailed Paul in his journey, at least at Galatia, and that the problem is widespread (hence the letter is written to churches, plural).
It is hard to know if "quickly" means that they took leave of their senses soon after Paul left, or if they received the other Gospel as readily as that which Paul preached, but either way it is clear that they have left behind what Paul received from Jesus and what they in turn received from Paul. They had turned away from the truth to a counterfeit Gospel. To a gospel that was distorted.
I believe that the question must be asked: have we done the same in America today?Have we abandoned the truth that was so graciously "gospeled" to us, in favor of another? Have we become unfaithful to the Jesus that saved our souls? The answer may well be "yes".
But even if we or an angel from Heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to what we have preached to you, he is to be accursed!
If even an angel from Heaven should bring another Gospel to you... I remember the first time this came up in conversation. I was talking with a friend of mine about the Book of Mormon because I was seriously distressed about the possibility that I might somehow be missing out on something big. What if, what the nice young men who had visited my house had spoken the truth? What if God had wiped his hands clean of all denominations that existed at the time of Joseph Smith (a believable suggestion to be sure)? What if an angel had "hot lined" him the whereabouts of the most spiritually significant documents since the canon of scripture. I did not want to miss out! "JP" he said, "remember what Paul said in Galatians..." and at that moment it clicked. I have never doubted the completeness of the Bible since; nor have I pondered the veracity of the ecclesiastical tabloids Smith and his block headed minions have promulgated.
Even if an angel! Why angels? Because, in the Bible, angels bring the messages of God to his people. Paul later states in Galatians that the Law was mediated by angels. But it doesn't take an angel to convince us! Just a few nice young men in neckties, or one nice young man in a very nice suit if he can get a TV ministry up and running. I am not usually one to name names, but I have to say that I take serious issues with the prosperity Gospel served up by TBN, CBN, and their cronies. Not to say that the whole is bad; it's like a block of cheese which you might be able to cut the corners off of and get some use out of it, but friends, I'm afraid that by the time you finish with them there isn't much left! The Paul Crouches and Joel Osteens of this world want us to think that the Kingdom of God revolves around us. That it is some massive group hug where we can all reach for the stars together. But I am here to tell you, the message that is projected from those pulpits is so self centered that you can hardly squeeze Jesus in at the end of the message.
There is no place for the Cross in the American church today. Sure, it might hang on our wall, or around our neck, but it is not in our hearts. The meaty transcendence and holiness of God, the grace of God has been set aside for a weekly serving of pablum that won't hurt our tummies. We come for inspiration, but I'm telling you what we need people is transformation. I love you enough to tell you things that you might not want to hear, and I refuse to patronize you with a plastic smile and a pat on the back because you deserve more. You were meant for more. For greater things. But unless you and Jesus are marching to the same beat you aren't going to do yourself or Him any good and he says that his road is narrow.
Paul tells them, let those who have peddled this garbage be accursed, "anathema". Cut them off, don't listen to them. Run like Joseph from Potiphar's wife, like a dog in a bull pen, cut them off!
Folks, we've been duped. Fooled into believing somehow that life is about us. That God is preoccupied with our creature comforts and copiousness of our carcasses. There could be nothing further from the truth. Sure, following God brings blessing! I'm living proof. God has brought me from being a useless selfish wretch to a life that I still can't believe. But that was never the goal. That came from following Jesus, and was not without its share of trouble.
Consider the descriptions of the purifying process of the righteous life that are given in scripture. It is likened to being smelted and cast, burned, mashed and reshaped. In short,it is not always a pleasant process, but to get the product you have to go through the process.
Haven't you ever wondered if there was more to life than this? More to church than this? Stand up, shake a hand, sit down, bow your heads, and hit the buffet... isn't there more? Absolutely! We should beg God that we could no longer go about business as usual, but that God would interrupt our lives and change us forever. Today can be a new day folks.
Just in case we missed it, or more truthfully to intensify his curse, Paul says it again. And he means it. This is no empty epithet, but it is a warning. If one is preaching a lie, they will be counted with the Father of Lies.
Now I don't mean to say that Joel Osteen and Paul Crouch are going to Hell, that is between them and Jesus. I know that there will be Baptists in Hell and Mormons in Heaven (although they'll both get there by ignorance). But folks, this is serious business. There is truth and there is falsehood, and much of our packaged and mass produced spiritual food is really just junk food. There are more Christian books, Bible translations, radio stations, websites, stores, ministries, and publications than ever before, and you know what? I'm not sure that much of it is doing any good.
So then, what does the real gospel look like. Well, I was hoping you would ask, so let's let Jesus preach to us.
Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind and all your strength, and love your neighbor as yourself. (Mk 12:30-31)
If we can get that down, then we are half way there.
From glory to glory folks. We can't sit in one place forever. That's not what we were meant to do.
Saturday, February 2, 2008
The Bi-Polar Prophet
It got really quiet after that, so I think I said I had to go study, but I just went to mope some more.
Rev.
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Only God
So today, I woke up, LATE, on the wrong side of the bed. About 12:30, when I finally got motivated enough to crawl out of "the pit" things began to come together. At the end, here is what God did for a worthless worm such as I:
1. Allowed me to rejoice with the mother of a deployed soldier at the birth of her child.
2. Sold my old washer and dryer without placing an ad, someone called me about something else and it came up. Turns out they needed a set yesterday.
3. Someone who I have been trying to bond with in the church sent me a note thanking me for "doing such a wonderful job" at their grandmother's funeral.
4. Got to encourage a Y. pastor who had to resign because of impossible personality conflicts (not that I would know anything about that).
5. I got a kiss from my wife. A really good one!
To top it all off, my favorite show returns tomorrow night.
Oh me of little faith.
Rev.
Sunday, January 27, 2008
My Favorite Rich Song
Jesus: From the Jesus Record
________________________
They say You walked upon the water once
When you lived as all men do
Please teach me how to walk the way You did
Because I want to walk with You
Jesus
They say you taught a lame man how to dance
When he had never stood without a crutch
Well, here am I Lord, holding out my withered hands
And I'm just waiting to be touched
Jesus
Write me into Your story
Whisper it to me
And let me know I'm Yours
Jesus
They say You spoke and calmed an angry wave
That was tossed across a stormy sea
Please teach me how to listen, how to obey
'Cause there's a storm inside of me
Jesus
Write me into Your story
Whisper it to me
And let me know I'm Yours
Jesus
They drove the cold nails through Your tired hands
And rolled a stone to seal Your grave
Feels like the devil's rolled a stone onto my heart
Can You roll that stone away?
Friday, January 25, 2008
Attention Broke College Students!
How to Buy Theological Books (Online):
"When I get a little money I buy books; and if any is left I buy food and clothes."
Erasmus
Warning: This will either be the most boring or useful “how-to” that you ever read. BTW: I’m always looking for good ideas/deals!
Step One: Utilize Your Brain Trust
E-mail some folks you who are “in the know” concerning your subject matter (professors, pastors, other nerds, etc.) Ask the following question: “If you could only own three books on say, supralapsarianism, what would they be?”
Step Two: 3+2=5Take the top three, by simple majority, and add anything on the subject by Ben Witherington or NT Wright. (Yes, I know that this brings you to five, but I am a preacher, not a mathematician!)
Step Three: Snag the ISBNFirst stop: CBD.com. They typically have the most current information on books, i.e. publishing dates, etc. The most important piece of data is that ISBN or International Standard Book Number. The ISBN is unique to that book, although a title may have more than one ISBN due to editions, bindings, etc. Most new books have two ISBNs, a 10 and 13 digit code because of differences in inventory software. The point is, if you have the ISBN from a book, you can usually find that EXACT pressing of that book (in some cases however, the cover will differ as multiple printings will maintain the same ISBN, thus the cover may vary but the binding and content will be identical.
Step Four: Cut and Paste Daniel-san…Using your trusty Cntrl (option or “squiggle” key on Macs), highlight the ISBNs, then using Cntrl-C and Cntrl-V commands, pasting them into your word processing software. Next, visit the following secure sites using the ISBN to search for your books:
Addall (the mother of all book search engines)
CBD
Buy.com
Abebooks
Amazon
E-Bay
Alibris
As you locate your books, toss them all in the shopping cart (keeping browser tabs up, Fire Fox is best for this IMHO). Then check the total price. Often, shipping incentives on sites like CBD will offset the initial cost of a book. BUT, sometimes you can score huge deals like I did today when I got Witherington’s commentary on Galatians for 20.98 + 3.75 = $24.73. The book retails at $42.00 (I saved $21.22, enough to buy the NT Wright book and a box of Cheeze-Its).
My best experiences have been with Abebooks because of their strict standards on gauging used titles (i.e. any writing at all, even a name, puts the book at “Good” condition or 3 of 5). Another plus to Abebooks, is that they often have titles that are out of stock elsewhere since they are mostly used or “remainder” titles (overstock returns from retail outfits like Mardel or Barnes and Noble).
Step Five: Be Not AfraidCBD has an amazing “damaged” bin. Damaged to them means that someone dropped the box, so the book had a bent edge, or it has a scratch on the cover from the box being opened hastily etc. 99.9% of the time, a “damaged” book is just as good as a book you’ve had in your backpack for a week. Recently I saw paperback Hebrew OT texts for $10.99, which is like $20 off.
Step Six: CutePDF.exeAs a pastor, the IRS gives me a tax break on some things I buy for the ministry through an “accountable re-imbursement” arrangement with our church. The best way I have found to keep track of my IRS deductible receipts from online purchases is to “print” my receipts using CutePDF writer. CutePDF allows you to use the print menu to create PDF files out of anything, webpages, Word Docs, etc. You can get that from download.com or just Google it to go to their homepage.
Step Six: ROADTRIP!As for “brick and mortar” Stores, Mardel and Barnes and Noble are usually useless when it comes to (evangelically oriented) academic Biblical studies resources. So, if you want something on Jesus by someone other than Elaine Pegals or Jon Dominic Crossan, you have to look elsewhere. Also, what they have is usually special ordered and then “orphaned” so they want full price to recoup their investment.
My suggestion is to hit used book stores. In Springfield MO the place to go is Redeemed Books (who usually has free coffee!), or ABC Books. The coolest thing about these stores is that you can actually pay for books with books!!! My wife scores tons of home school books using ones we don’t use anymore. Call ahead though, because most stores only allow trades on certain days and have some restrictions (i.e. you can hardly give away Left Behind books!) OH, and Redeemed has two sales a year where things are 25-50% off, AND ministers get a discount on everything, including music.
Lastly, if you are blessed to live near a publishing house (i.e, Grand Rapids, MI or New York, NY…) Dr. Bayer told a story of being able to visit the actual publishing facility and purchasing defective books (like one that were bound upside down) for so little money that they literally filled their car. Just a thought (any one up for a trip to Grand Rapids!?).
So, now that I have eternally secured my status as nerd of the year, happy hunting!