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Defending The Faith is About Life, Not Just Doctrine – What’s needed today is a robust understanding of the Christian faith that recognizes the multi-faceted meaning of orthodoxy.

4 Reasons To Give Generously – Some good thoughts from J.I. Packer.

Top 40 Online Resources on Using Social Media in Ministry – A great list that is surely to help us think about social median and ministry.

Do Fathers Matter? – Fathers, it turns out, contribute far more to their children than many of us realize.

How To Grow SpirituallyMany people miss God’s simple, ordinary plan for their spiritual growth—diligent attendance to the means of grace.

The Extraordinary Work of Ordinary Means – May we not despise the day of small things, but may we become more aware of God’s extra-ordinary work through our ordinary means.

The Graduation Song – For those of you who have just graduated High School or know someone who did. Pretty funny!

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Southern Baptists’ Millennial Problem – The 46,000 churches of the Southern Baptist Convention are baptizing fewer people this year, and most of our churches are not baptizing any millennials (which means, depending on generational calculations, people between the ages of 14-34, or, teenagers through early thirties).

Top 10 Christian Cliches We Should Probably Stop Using–Unless We Really Mean It

7 Signs That You’re “Judging” Others It’s what you do after you tell someone the truth that determines whether or not you are condemning—a.k.a. judging—them.

Six Lies Grads Will Be Told – It’s graduation season. And as such, scores of graduating students and their doting family and friends will be exposed to the senseless drivel known as a graduation speech. This speech is supposed to prepare the students to face the real world—or perhaps the “real world” of going to college.

What Millennials Want in Leaders – The Millennial generation has much to offer. As a whole, they desire to serve others. Most of them are very family oriented. And they really want to listen and learn from others. Indeed they are looking for a few good leaders to follow. When they find them, they will follow with commitment and enthusiasm.

10 Books To Read This Summer – A good list from Trevin Wax.

Just for FUN: Things You Do At A Wedding That’d Be Creepy Anywhere Else

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“One anothers” I can’t find in the New Testament – Sanctify one another, humble one another, scrutinize one another, pressure one another, embarrass one another, corner one another, interrupt one another, defeat one another, sacrifice one another, shame one another, judge one another, run one another’s lives, confess one another’s sins, intensify one another’s sufferings, point out one another’s failings . . . .

Fasting From Technology – Fasting is, of course, an ancient practice, but in the past fifty years or so it has been applied more and more to electronic devices, from the radio to the smart phone.

Making Friends, But Not Disciples – The term “evangelism” gives many Christians the willies. We immediately think of canned presentations that seem stiff and unnatural. We are paralyzed by the thought of knocking on a stranger’s door and talking about Jesus.

The Worst Places in The World to Be Religious – Since 1999, the U.S. State Department has tracked the world’s worst abusers of religious rights. As the most recent report notes, it has never lacked for material. Persecutions of people of faith are rising across the globe.

The 10 Least Popular Books of the Bible – How familiar are you with these books of the Bible?

Why Do Asian-American Students Outperform Their White Peers? – At least academically, it’s an incontrovertible fact that Asian-Americans outperform their white peers (and every other ethnic group). But why such dominance?

A Great Commencement Speech by a Former Navy Seal

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100 Bible Knowledge Questions – How much literate are you of the Bible? This test may help you decide.

Are Youth Groups Bad? A Rant on Bad Research – Research shows that youth groups are bad for our students, right? Not so fast.

10 Characteristics Shared By Great Leaders – I’ve just finished one of the most enjoyable books on leadership I’ve ever read. It’s called View From The Top: An Inside Look at How People in Power See and Shape the World. It’s the result of a remarkable 10-year study of 550 elite American CEOs, senior government leaders, and nonprofit executives. From my reading of the book, I’d like to share with you the 10 factors I picked out that most of these leaders seem to have in common.

Nine Heartfelt Things Church Members Would Like To Say To Their Pastors Hear these heartfelt words from church members who love their pastors, from men and women who truly desire the best for them.

Satan’s Lies About Prayer – It’s a fair bet that most Christians would see prayer as a vital component of our relationship with God. We can bring our worries and troubles to our Father, we can ask for anything in Jesus’ name, we can be confident in our approach to God because of the blood of our saviour—these are all things we affirm and love.

8 Ways To Comfort The Suffering – “People suffer differently.” So the process of discipling them through their pain will look different depending upon the person you are walking through the shadow lands with.

Why Youth Ministers Need To Be Theologians

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A Theology Of Washing The Dishes

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Washing the dishes is such a trivial task, but according to Tim Chester, in his short little book The Everyday Gospel: A Theology of Washing The Dishes, “it represents countless ordinary activities we do each day.”

But though such tasks are everyday and routine, they should be informed by the gospel. This is why Chester writes The Everyday Gospel. He wants to get across that the “Christian faith is for Monday as well as Sunday mornings.” And he uses the simple task of washing the dishes to illustrate how.

For starters, one way that Chester highlights how the gospel works itself out in washing dishes, and every activity we do, is that doing dishes brings joy. It does so because the gospel changes our desires. We want to do what is right and so we now ” find joy in doing the right thing because it is the right thing.”

Chester goes a bit further, however, in explaining how we find joy in washing dishes.

First, we find joy in washing dishes because we bring order out of chaos. Remember the creations story? The earth was “formless and void,” but God brought order (see Genesis 1:1-2).

Having been created in the image of God, we are given that same task of bringing order. “The divine activity of governing chaos,” writes Chester, “ordering what is formless, bringing beauty out of mess, tidying up creation–that task is given to humanity made in God’s image.”

When we tidy up the kitchen, we should feel good about it. And the goodness that we feel is a “divine feeling.”

Second, we find joy in doing the dishes because it serves others. Chester writes that “when I wash up I deny myself. I put others first. I say, in effect, that someone matters more to me than my comfort.” It is when we look outward beyond ourselves that we encounter true joy. We were not made to look inward.

This aspect of serving others in the everyday activities of our lives is a powerful point in Chester’s book. He writes:

Christian service takes place in day-to-day life; its occasion and location is everyday life. Indeed, the church is not a building, nor is it an event. The church is the community of God’s people sharing life–ordinary life, everyday life–at any moment and in any place with gospel intentionality. 

I think sometimes we forget about how the gospel permeates all of life. We know it is important for mission trips, etc…, but as Chester concludes, the gospel “does not only belong to a quiet time and opportunities to share the gospel. It affects every moment, every relationship, every activity.”

“If you do not have an everyday gospel,” writes Chester, “then the gospel will become a formula that you have to crowbar into conversations. But an everyday gospel creates opportunities everyday to talk about Jesus.”

Consider getting a copy of The Everyday Gospel. At only around 48 pages, it’s a quick read.

 

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The Expansion of Christianity (a list of articles)

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For several days, I have posted about the expansion of Christianity in the first centuries. Below is a list of those posts with a one sentence summary. I have also included a few resources for further study.

The Growth of Christianity in the First Centuries

 The growth of Christianity in the first centuries is quite staggering when looking at the numbers.

The Growth of Early Christianity Among Women

 One attraction to Christianity was it’s treatment of women as equals.

The Growth of Early Christianity & Compassion

One of the major considerations as to why Christianity grew in the early centuries was that it provided help and compassion for those in need.

Despite The Difficulties, Christianity Triumphed

 What were some of the difficulties that the early church faced in spreading the gospel?

God Makes A Way For The Spread of the Gospel

 Was it just a coincidence that Christianity emerged when it did? Or was it divine providence that prepared the world for the birth of Christianity?

Did The Early Church Have A Plan to Grow?

The early church did not have a man-made plan. They walked in the “fear of the Lord” and in the “comfort of the Holy Spirit.”

Resources

The Rise of Christianity by Rodney Stark

The Triumph of Christianity by Rodney Stark

The Greco-Roman World of the New Testament Era by James S. Jeffers

The First Thousand Years by Robert Louis Wilken

The Christians as The Romans Saw Them by Robert Louis Wilken

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The State of Evangelism – Are Millennials evangelizing more or less than previous generations? What is the future of evangelism?

What Can Miserable Christians Sing? – This article was intended to highlight what I saw as a major deficiency in Christian worship, a deficiency that is evident in both traditional and contemporary approaches: the absence of the language of lament.

20 Time Management Lessons Everyone Should Learn in Their 20’s These are very helpful for those in their 30’s, 40’s, 50’s and beyond.

Lighten Up Christians, God Loves A Good Time – Challenging ourselves to embrace the sense of fun infused in this world.

Yawning At Tigers Ignoring the majesty and splendor of God leaves us yawning in the face of a tiger.

A Simple Habit To Set The Tone for Your Day – The thoughts we start the day with can set the tone for our day. We can begin the day grumbling and down. We can kick off the morning worrying or stressed. “Have you realized that most of your unhappiness in life is due to the fact that you are listening to yourself instead of talking to yourself?”

Pro Day: L’Damian Washington – Powerful short video!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_j85Bg4Ecoo#t=34

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The Growth of Early Christianity Among Women

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The growth of Christianity in the early centuries, as was written about the other day, is quite staggering. This is especially so in light of the Roman Empire and its religion.

For a small Jewish group, of whom Rome thought nothing about, to grow into something that in 300 AD would estimate to over 6 million people is an incredible story. And it’s one we can learn much from.

So how did it happen?

Rodney Stark, in his book The Rise of Christianity, gives us some answers. “It is obvious,” writes Stark, “that people do not embrace a new faith if they are content with the older one.” In order for a new religion to break into a culture therefore, they must always “make their way in the market opening left them by weaknesses in the conventional religion (s) of a society.”

This is especially true in a pluralistic market where there are many options. For a new religion “to make headway—Hindu groups in the United States, for example—is extremely rare and depends on something’s having gone wrong in the process by which pluralism maintains market equilibrium.”

So why did Christianity grow in the Roman Empire? In a world full of religious options and a plurality of gods, what was the attraction to Christianity?

One attraction to Christianity was it’s treatment of women. Many have said that Jesus’ “attitude toward women was revolutionary as for him the sexes were equal.” So the early church, as it modeled Jesus, viewed men and women as equal as well.

Stark writes that increased female status can be found “within the family and within the religious community.” This happened as a result of several things. First, Christians did not condone female infanticide (actually, they didn’t condone infanticide at all). Second, Christians condemned “divorce, incest, marital infidelity, and polygamy.” And third, should women be widowed, they were not pressured to remarry and were allowed to keep their husband’s estate.

There has been objective evidence that leaves no doubt that the early Christian women did enjoy greater equality with men than did Jewish and pagan women. A study of Christian burial in the catacombs under Rome, based on 3,733 cases, found that Christian women were nearly as likely as Christian men to be commemorated with lengthy inscriptions. This “near equality in the commemoration of males and females is something that is peculiar to Christians, and sets them apart from the non-Christian populations of the city” (see the Triumph of Christianity by Rodney Stark).

To summarize, “women were drawn to Christianity because it offered them a life that was greatly superior to the life they otherwise would have led” (see Chapter 7 in The Triumph of Christianity).

So what can we learn from this? What does this say about the power of the gospel to change lives and the cultures we live in? What does the early church say to us about the power of “loving your neighbor as yourself” and treating those around you as equals, not inferiors?

There is something powerful about the gospel when we treat others as Paul commands in Philippians 2:3-4: Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves. Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others.

 

 

 

 

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