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Shaped By Suffering

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What is God doing in the midst of suffering? Could it be that He is moulding us and shaping us? But isn’t there a better way to be conformed to His image? C.S. Lewis, in his book The Problem of Pain, writes of this dilemma…

We want not so much a father in heaven as a grandfather in heaven–whose plan for the universe was such that it might be said at the end of each day, “A good time was had by all.”

I should very much like to live in a universe which was governed on such lines, but since it is abundantly clear that I don’t, and since I have reason to believe nevertheless that God is love, I conclude that my conception of love needs correction….

Over a sketch made idly to amuse a child, an artist may not take much trouble: he may be content to let it go even though it is not exactly as he meant it to be. But over the great picture of his life–the work which he loves, though in a different fashion, as intensely as a man loves a women or a mother a child–he will take endless trouble–and would, doubtless, thereby give endless trouble to the picture if it were sentient. One can imagine a sentient picture, after being rubbed and scraped and re-commenced for the tenth time, wishing that it were only a thumb-nail sketch whose making was over in a minute. In the same way, it is natural for us to wish that God had designed for us a less glorious and less arduous destiny; but then we are wishing not for more love but less. 

The Problem of Pain, C.S. Lewis, pages 39-42

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The Cross: The Signature Of Jesus

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Challenging words from Brennan Manning…

The signature of Jesus, the Cross, is the ultimate expression of God’s love for the world. The church is the church of the crucified, risen Christ only when it is stamped with his signature; only when it faces outward and moves with him along the way of the Cross. 

Fidelity to the Word  will take us along the path of downward mobility in the midst of an upwardly mobile world. We will find ourselves not on the path to power but on the path to powerlessness; not on the road to success but on the road to servanthood; not on the broad road of praise and popularity but on the narrow road of ridicule and rejection. 

To be a Christian is to be like Christ. Somehow we must lose our life in order to find it. Christianity preaches not only a crucified God, but also crucified men and women. There is no discipleship without the Cross. I am not a follow of Jesus if I live with him only in Bethlehem and Nazareth and not in Gethsemane and on Calvary, too. 

-Brennan Manning, The Signature of Jesus (p. 10-11)

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Social Media: Starring In Our Own Show?

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Profound thoughts on social media from Mike Cosper in his book, The Stories We Tell: How TV And Movies Long For And Echo The Truth

One way to understand social media is as a vehicle for self-broadcasting. When we post on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, we’re projecting an image of ourselves to the world. 

Our presence on social media is a story we’re telling about who we are, and like the production of a reality TV show, it’s all about the editing. What we share and don’t share on social media is shaped by how we want the world to see us. With the click of a button, we can open and close doors of connectivity. No awkward conversations. Rare repercussions. Easily managed, easily edited lives.

Social media also provides a profound illusion; our mobile devices are designed to make us fell like the whole digital world is all about us. Our tailored choices about who we want to hear from (and who we don’t) are in place already. We open an app and feel “connected,” when in fact we haven’t connected at all; we’ve actually disconnected from the people immediately around us. 

At any moment, we can escape into a private world that’s tailored to us and that is eager for our next picture, our next status update, our next link–a world complete with a built-in system of rewards for worthy content: retweets, likes, and so on. On the web, we all star in our own show. We glory in ourselves. 

 

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Book Review: The Stories We Tell

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Once upon a time…. Those words always seem to capture our attention. Why? Because we love a good story. And the reason why we love a good story, according to Mike Cosper in his book The Stories We Tell: How TV and Movies Long For and Echo The Truth, is that “we have a great storytelling God.”

It’s not just that we love stories, but it is stories that help us “to know who we are–to understand ourselves and our place in the world. We are made in the image of a storytelling God.” And this is why Cosper writes this book. He has personally been overtaken by the story world of TV and cinema and as a result, has discovered that the “grand narrative” of salvation history “subsumes and encompasses all the other comings and goings of every creature–real or fictitious–on the earth.”

Cosper provides illustration after illustration of movies and TV shows, many of which I have not watched, and “how they reveal the heart’s longing for the gospel.” Cosper does not presume to know the intentions of the writers or directors, but this much is evident to him, “if art is accurately depicting human life, it will reflect both humanity’s brokenness and the heart’s longing for eternity, beauty, and redemption–all of which are found in the gospel.”

Reading The Stories We Tell caused me to become aware of several things. First, I became aware again of just how powerful stories are. A simple night at the movies has the power to touch our deepest emotions. Just consider the recent release of American Sniper. When the final credits roll in this film, people leave the theater with a solemness that only a story can create.

Second, because story is so powerful, I need to work at becoming a better story teller. Specifically, I need to become a better gospel story teller. The gospel is not just a series of facts, but a story of rescue which has the power to replot our lives and the lives of those we encounter.

Third, if what Cosper writes is true, then there is the opportunity to allow the stories found in movies and TV to open doors for us to share the gospel with others. Stories are more than entertainment. The stories people are drawn to reveal to us that they have a longing for hope along with a hero to save the day.

As we think about what draws people to story, we must include ourselves in that discussion as well. Why do we like certain movies and TV shows? What do the stories we enjoy tell us about our own hopes and dreams? I think that we will find that we are like everyone else in this fallen world. “We long for an ultimately satisfying embrace,” writes Cosper, “that welcomes us as we are for who we are.” Ultimately, that embrace is found in the gospel.

Finally, Cosper has helped me to realize that it can be profitable to watch a good movie or TV series. “For centuries,” writes Cosper, “people have gathered and told tales meant to inspire hope and shed light on the struggles of life. They’ve told about men who conquered dragons and raised mountains, who rescued damsels and rose from the dead. Our hearts swell when we hear and see these stories.” The good news for us who believe, however, is that as we “hear these stories of life, death, and resurrection,” we know “in our hearts that it really did happen.”

I don’t suspect that movies and TV are going to disappear anytime soon in our culture. Therefore, I found reading Cosper’s book both helpful and enlightening. It’s a reminder of how good the story of the Bible is and how it “tells us that life, indeed, is heading somewhere. There’s an end to the story, and it’s an end that by God’s grace can be an experience of the greatest good and the most satisfying glorification that we’ll ever know.”

Crossway has provided a complimentary copy of this book for this review through Beyond the Page.

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10 Quotes From “Dangerous Calling”

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Below are 10 quotes from Paul Tripp’s book Dangerous Calling: Confronting the Unique Challenges of Pastoral Ministry. Though the title implies it might be a book just for pastors, I have found that any believer would benefit from reading this book for two reasons. First, Tripp’s basic premise is how we must continue to understand our daily need of God’s grace. All of us would do well to continue to read of our need in this area. And second, it would assist us in empathizing with the demands and pressures of pastoral ministry.

Here are 10 quotes from the book that I have found both challenging and thought-provoking…

Autonomous Christianity never works, because our spiritual life was designed by God to be a community project (p. 38).

Bad things happen when maturity is more defined by knowing that it is by being. Danger is afloat when you come to love the ideas more than the God whom they represent and the people they are meant to free (p. 42).

It is your own daily experience of the rescue of the gospel that gives you a passion for people to experience the same rescue (p. 64).

Could it be that many of the stresses of ministry are the result of our seeking to get things out of ministry that it will never deliver? (p. 102).

Once something is our treasure, it will command our desires and shape our behavior (p. 103).

No one gives grace better than a person who is deeply persuaded that he needs it himself and is being given it in Christ. This tenderness causes me to be gracious, gentle, patient, understanding, and hopeful in the face of the sin of others, while never compromising God’s holy call (p. 122).

We must never forget that we earned neither our standing with the Lord nor our place in ministry (p. 161).

It’s pride, not humility, that makes it hard to say no (p. 162).

We must remember that there is no grace that we offer to others that we don’t at once need ourselves (p. 194).

Ministry is war for the gospel in your own heart (p. 203).

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Best Books Read In 2014

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Below are my top reads from 2014. They are in no particular order or genre nor have they necessarily been published in 2014.

Switch: How to Change Things When Change is Hard by Chip & Dan Heath. An interesting read with some great stories of why we make and why we don’t make the changes we do in our lives. I also would recommend Made To Stick as well. 

Get Real: Sharing Your Everyday Faith Every Day by John S. Leonard. This has become one of my favorite books on sharing the gospel with others. You can read a quick review of it here.

What’s Best Next: How The Gospel Transforms The Way You Get Things Done by Matt Perman. I’m not necessarily an organized person so this book was a great help to me as it caused me to begin thinking about why I should be organized as well as some great practical advise. You can read more about the book here. 

Misreading Scripture With Western Eyes: Removing Cultural Blinders to Better Understand the Bible by E. Randolph Richards & Brannon J. O’Brien. We sometimes forget that many times we read the Bible as though it were a Western text. This is a simple read that helped me to think through the way I interpret and teach Scripture. 

One Way Love: Inexhaustible Grace for an Exhausted World by Tullian Tchividjian. A much needed read in a culture that is all about performance!

The Ragamuffin Gospel by Brennan Manning. If you feel like a failure in your walk with Christ and continually beat yourself up about it, this is a great book to read. 

While The World Watched: A Birmingham Bombing Survivor Comes Of Age During The Civil Rights Movement by Carolyn Maull McKinstry. The most challenging quote of the book for me was: “It seemed that what people learned at their churches on Sundays about unity and love they placed on the shelf during the remainder of the week.”

Bonhoeffer On The Christian Life: From The Cross, For The World by Stephen Nichols. I’m a Bonhoeffer fan and found this book to be a great summary of Bonhoeffer’s life and theology. This is a great book to begin one’s journey into understanding Bonhoeffer. 

Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand. Before I saw the movie, I wanted to make sure I read the book. I’m glad I did. I couldn’t put it down. 

Reordered Love: Reordered Lives: Learning The Deep Meaning of Happiness by David Naugle. Naugle, in this book, does well at showing that true happiness and joy comes from a right relationship with God. This is a much needed read in today’s culture that is obsessed with the search for happiness. 

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Lists Of Best Books Read In 2014

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I always enjoy seeing what others are reading for by doing so, I usually come away adding some books to my own personal reading list. Since it is the end of the year, many folks post their top books of the year. Below is a list of a few of the lists. Hopefully it will inspire you to read in 2015.

  1. Aaron Armstrong’s top books of 2014. 
  2. TGC (Together for the Gospel) Staff Site Best Books from 2014. 
  3. Tim Challies Top Books of 2014. 
  4. Trevin Wax’s Favorite Ten Reads of 2014. 
  5. Kevin DeYoung’s Top Ten Books of 2014. 
  6. One Sentence Book Reviews by Philip Nation. 
  7. Christianity Today’s 2015 Book Awards. 
  8. Biblical Foundations Best of 2014 (This list is a bit more technical in regards to theology and Biblical studies)

 

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Receiving Grace Leads To Giving Grace

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In Paul Tripp’s book A Dangerous Calling, he warns pastors and church leaders of the danger of forgetting their need for the grace of God. This is a much needed word!! He writes…

No one gives grace better than a person who is deeply persuaded that he needs it himself and is being given it in Christ. This tenderness causes me to be gracious, gentle, patient, understanding, and hopeful in the face of the sin of others, while never compromising God’s holy call.

It protects me from deadly assessments like, “I can’t believe you would do such a thing,” or, “I would never have thought of…,” that are me telling me that I am essentially different from the people to whom I minister.

It’s hard to bring the gospel to people I am looking down my nose at or neither like nor respect. In the face of the sin of others, awe-inspirred tenderness frees me from being an agent of condemnation or from asking the law to do what only grace can accomplish and motivates me to be a tool of that grace.

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