Just outside my office window is a grevillea bush, which currently is bursting all over with pale pink flowers. Every day a wattlebird comes to sup from these nectar-laden flowers. Each flower has many little stalks with only a tiny spot of nectar on each, but the wattlebird goes from flower to flower gathering these little morsels of sweetness. Every morning, through the cool of the night, the flowers have replenished; every day the wattlebird returns to feed. Along with the wattlebird, there are dainty little spinebills, cheeky, chatty New Holland honey eaters, and the occasional rosella who call in for a sugar hit.
But it is the wattlebird who most amazes me. He is a large bird, and the amount of nectar he needs to collect in a day must be enormous. How does he go when the heat of summer burns off the flowers and the nectar dries up? The birds can't store up supplies. Each day and every day they must be fed by the Father.
Jesus said, "Not a sparrow falls to the ground but the Father knows it." And he told us of how kind the Father was in providing for His creatures. He really does care for both humanity and beast. And he told us this so that we would not be anxious or foolish in how we view the future. Anxiety and foolishness would push us to do what the birds cannot do—to try to store up for the future. Wisdom and freedom comes from trust in the Father's good hand. He loves birds, and we are very precious in His sight.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Current Reading Nov 2011
Well, this may not be of much interest to you, but here's what I'm reading or have been reading recently. It's certainly been interesting for me!
I've really enjoyed getting through Grace Upon Grace: Spirituality For Today (Concordia, St. Louis: 2008) by Rev'd Dr. John Kleinig — it's a treatment of Luther's understanding of the means by which we are grown by God, i.e. prayer, meditation and temptation. God Himself is the prime actor in these three areas. Christian spirituality is essentially a receptive spirituality.
Along similar lines is Gene Veith's outline of Lutheran spirituality, The Spirituality Of The Cross: The Way Of The First Evangelicals (Concordia, St. Louis; 1999). Particularly helpful to me in this study was his treatment of the doctrine of vocation, and the Lutheran understanding of the two kingdoms. Vocation is the means God uses in order to mask Himself in His provisions for creation. Veith argues that Luther's thought could be summarised under two great doctrinal heads: the doctrine of justification and the doctrine of vocation. I was convinced.
I've also read Roland Allen's missiological classic, Missionary Principles—And Practice (Lutterworth, Cambridge; 1913, 2006). A great stimulus for a preaching project. Allen is exploring the role of the Holy Spirit in the mission of the church in four brief, pungent and thought-provoking chapters. The Spirit himself provides the impulse for mission (not the command to be on mission). The goal of the mission is the revelation of Jesus Christ, and this goal is realised more and more as the various nations express the truth of Christ in their settings. The means of the mission are in Christ: we are the means he uses. We don't need to find means to accomplish something for him; He is using us to accomplish what he will do. (Jens Christensen makes the same point in his classic book, Mission To Islam And Beyond, New Creation, Blackwood; 1977, 2001). In the last chapter he explores the reaction to all this in the church.
Currently I am reading The Ethics Of Evangelism by Elmer Theissen (Paternoster, Milton Keynes; 2011). This is a philosophical defence of ethical proselytising. I'm only through the introductory material, and have just started reading his analysis of various objections to proselytising as essentially unethical. It seems an important book to me.
And for my enjoyment and to wind down at night, I am taking little bits of Alexander McCall-Smith's Bertie Plays The Blues as my bed-time reading. I love his gentleness, his fondness for his characters, his amiable humanity. And I really want to know of Bertie ever gets to being seven! I know I could read the book in one day, but it is nice having little lolly-sized packages to read each evening, and to stretch out the pleasure that his writing gives.
I've really enjoyed getting through Grace Upon Grace: Spirituality For Today (Concordia, St. Louis: 2008) by Rev'd Dr. John Kleinig — it's a treatment of Luther's understanding of the means by which we are grown by God, i.e. prayer, meditation and temptation. God Himself is the prime actor in these three areas. Christian spirituality is essentially a receptive spirituality.
Along similar lines is Gene Veith's outline of Lutheran spirituality, The Spirituality Of The Cross: The Way Of The First Evangelicals (Concordia, St. Louis; 1999). Particularly helpful to me in this study was his treatment of the doctrine of vocation, and the Lutheran understanding of the two kingdoms. Vocation is the means God uses in order to mask Himself in His provisions for creation. Veith argues that Luther's thought could be summarised under two great doctrinal heads: the doctrine of justification and the doctrine of vocation. I was convinced.
I've also read Roland Allen's missiological classic, Missionary Principles—And Practice (Lutterworth, Cambridge; 1913, 2006). A great stimulus for a preaching project. Allen is exploring the role of the Holy Spirit in the mission of the church in four brief, pungent and thought-provoking chapters. The Spirit himself provides the impulse for mission (not the command to be on mission). The goal of the mission is the revelation of Jesus Christ, and this goal is realised more and more as the various nations express the truth of Christ in their settings. The means of the mission are in Christ: we are the means he uses. We don't need to find means to accomplish something for him; He is using us to accomplish what he will do. (Jens Christensen makes the same point in his classic book, Mission To Islam And Beyond, New Creation, Blackwood; 1977, 2001). In the last chapter he explores the reaction to all this in the church.
Currently I am reading The Ethics Of Evangelism by Elmer Theissen (Paternoster, Milton Keynes; 2011). This is a philosophical defence of ethical proselytising. I'm only through the introductory material, and have just started reading his analysis of various objections to proselytising as essentially unethical. It seems an important book to me.
And for my enjoyment and to wind down at night, I am taking little bits of Alexander McCall-Smith's Bertie Plays The Blues as my bed-time reading. I love his gentleness, his fondness for his characters, his amiable humanity. And I really want to know of Bertie ever gets to being seven! I know I could read the book in one day, but it is nice having little lolly-sized packages to read each evening, and to stretch out the pleasure that his writing gives.
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Virtuous Ambition
On the whole, ambition has much about it that is dangerous, corrupting, selfish and sinful. But wanting something is a very important Christian virtue. It is the corruption of desire and ambition that is the problem, not desire and ambition in themselves.
If sacrifice is to make any sense, if laying a thing down in honour and praise of God actually means anything, there must be desire and ambition at the start. If what we give away or give up is actually gift, and expresses self-denial in love for another, then there must be desire or ambition to begin. A gift that means nothing to us to give is no act of love.
Positively, ambition and desire lie at the heart of loving the Lord our God with all our heart, mind, soul and strength. Passivity, nonchalance, indifference are hardly the ideas that come to mind with that command! Instead there is the anticipation that the whole of life is seen as the arena in which we seek to glorify and praise Him as largely as we can. Great ambition!—to make God's glory as clearly seen as possible. This isn't necessarily best done by a false humility that glories in our being "nothing". Rather, the glory of God is a man or a woman fully alive!
Paul urged Timothy with a motto for life, one that he wanted Timothy to pass on to the congregation in his care. "This is a trustworthy saying: whoever desires to be an overseer desires a noble work." The saying is encouraging and cautionary. The desiring that Paul speaks of is eager, keen, longing. The desiring to be an overseer (Gk: episkopos) is not for a position but a work. Sinful ambition seeks position; godly ambition seeks to be as useful to God and His people as possible.
[Here is some teaching I recently gave on this topic.]
If sacrifice is to make any sense, if laying a thing down in honour and praise of God actually means anything, there must be desire and ambition at the start. If what we give away or give up is actually gift, and expresses self-denial in love for another, then there must be desire or ambition to begin. A gift that means nothing to us to give is no act of love.
Positively, ambition and desire lie at the heart of loving the Lord our God with all our heart, mind, soul and strength. Passivity, nonchalance, indifference are hardly the ideas that come to mind with that command! Instead there is the anticipation that the whole of life is seen as the arena in which we seek to glorify and praise Him as largely as we can. Great ambition!—to make God's glory as clearly seen as possible. This isn't necessarily best done by a false humility that glories in our being "nothing". Rather, the glory of God is a man or a woman fully alive!
Paul urged Timothy with a motto for life, one that he wanted Timothy to pass on to the congregation in his care. "This is a trustworthy saying: whoever desires to be an overseer desires a noble work." The saying is encouraging and cautionary. The desiring that Paul speaks of is eager, keen, longing. The desiring to be an overseer (Gk: episkopos) is not for a position but a work. Sinful ambition seeks position; godly ambition seeks to be as useful to God and His people as possible.
[Here is some teaching I recently gave on this topic.]
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Sheep Without A Shepherd
"When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd." (Matt. 9:36)
Harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. I think the translation, and the way we've heard these words preached on, doesn't help us. We may be tempted to think that there is silliness, confusion, lostness as the main problem that faces these shepherdless sheep.
Harassed - the Greek word contains the idea of being flayed, skinned, mangled. And even possibly of these being self-inflicted.
Helpless - the Greek word contains the idea of being violently cast down or cast away.
The problem for sheep without shepherds is not so much that they are lost and leaderless; it is that they face terrible danger and even death.
So, when Jesus looked compassionately at the crowd, he was moved with deep pity because they were in mortal danger and there was no one to help.
But there was him! He had a gospel to proclaim, and kingly authority to exert. And this gospel and this kingdom would take him to a cross where he would be violently cast away and mangled by the angry mob of humanity. And entering our lostness, he found us to bring us home to Him who clothes and heals us, and who will in no way cast us down. To the Father of all grace and mercy.
Labels:
compassion,
Jesus Christ,
sheep,
shepherd
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Let Your Light Shine
"Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven." (Matt. 5:16)
Why is it so commonly assumed that the light Jesus speaks about here is the same as the good works that are done?
The light enables seeing. The things to be seen are the good works. Until the light shines the good works are in shadow and darkness, and their form and reality are not truly perceived. What is it that is mistaken about these works, whilst darkness prevails? It is the origin of the works that is not clear.
Until the light shines, the person seeing the works in the shadows assumes that works arise from the human do-er. That is the normal assumption of self-justifying humanity: "Our good deeds arise from ourselves. We are not really rightly judged by God."
When the light shines, suddenly something very shocking is exposed. There is no one who does good, no not one. No one is good but God alone. All that is true and good is wrought in God. I of myself am an unprofitable servant.
The light is not the works. They cannot light themselves. The light is the gospel. The works do not give light to the gospel; the gospel gives light to the works.
Without the light of the gospel, what is done is inherently misinterpreted. The best man in the world, who went about doing good and healing and releasing men and women, was crucified as a sinner by the "righteous" who judged him. Without the clarifying light of the gospel, good works will be misinterpreted as bad.
The good works we are to do must be good not in unenlightened eyes but good in God's eyes, who alone is good. Every person, since our fateful upward Fall, thinks he or she knows what is good, what is evil. But if the light within us is darkness, what then? What God calls good, rebellious humanity calls bad, inhuman, degrading, repressive. But what if our seeing were blinded, lit not by light but darkness?
Let your light shine: proclaim the gospel. Only this gospel brings reconciliation to the Father, and so enables true seeing from His side and in His light.
Thursday, May 20, 2010
The Problem of Perpetual Adolescence
Mark Driscoll is a very funny guy, but he always has a point to make. Here he tackles the Peter Pan culture that seems to afflict Western Christian guys. You may feel battered and flattened by the end, but there is something to learn from it!
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