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Showing posts from May 16, 2010

Free in Christ?

Acts 20:35 "Remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said, It is more blessed to give than to receive." I have seen a trend in the Church. It is a spirit of expecting resources for free. We will download sermons, read articles on the web about the faith, and etc. We don't give much of a though of who just paid for us to do that. I call it Christian Socialism. It is part of a larger trend of how the internet has really changed the rules. The demise of the newspapers has been the result of people being able to get the same information elsewhere for free. "Why pay for it?" is a common response. It used to be that the newspaper was one of the few sources of information. That was also back in the day when people probably never traveled more than 100 miles from their house, worked the same job for life, and had no other sources of information than nosey Mildred down the way who made it her business to be in the know of others' lives. Today, if the newspaper i

Good Old Peter

John 21:18 "Verily, verily, I say unto thee, When thou wast young, thou girdedst thyself, and walkedst whither thou wouldest: but when thou shalt be old, thou shalt stretch forth thy hands, and another shall gird thee, and carry thee whither thou wouldest not." Before Jesus ascended, he had a breakfast meeting on the beach with Peter and the boys. Then, there was a little 1-1 between Jesus and Peter, Jesus is asking Peter if he loved Jesus. After Peter says three times that he does love Jesus, replacing Peter's three denials, Jesus tells him the statement of the verse above. I love how Peter then points to John, "How about him?" Jesus tells Peter to worry about himself. Good advice in general. Make no mistake about it, when we fail--Jesus or other people--it is more often than not because of a lack of love. There may be other secondary issues like fear, but the lack of love does much to explain causation. Then, Jesus really zeroes in on what it means for Peter

Tough and Tears

Luke 7:2 "And a certain centurion's servant, who was dear unto him, was sick, and ready to die." Mark Driscoll has been preaching a series on the Gospel of Luke. I have no need to repeat most of what he preaches here in his sermon on "Jesus Heals a Centurions Servant." One thing that did strike me about this sermon was the relational depth among the major actors: the Centurion, Jesus, the Jews who came to Jesus on the Centurion's behalf, and the servant himself. Driscoll does a great job making these personalities three-dimensional in regards to their realities...what they are thinking and feeling. The Centurion is sorrowful over the impending death of his servant. The pathos is real and Driscoll tells of some personal situations with illness, death, and dying, that he is experiencing presently. We have all seen carboard life-size cut-outs of famous people like Stallone. And tourists pay $$$ to get a picture taken with it. When the picture is developed, it

Love Never Fails

1 Cor. 13:8 Love never fails.... If a young lad or lady were to inquire of me about whether he or she should pursue Ph.D. studies, I would try and ascertain their intellect, their will, and their heart. To earn a Ph.D. obviously does take a modicum of smarts. It is not all that it takes but it is one solid log to throw on the fire. The second attribute I would try to assess is how driven the person is; it takes a lot of discipline to earn a Ph.D. I sat in the chair of my study nearly every Saturday for eight long years for 8-10 hours doing school work associated with my doctoral studies. That was the least I would do, some weeks it was often a lot more, while working full-time for the better part of a decade. When my students whine at school that a class is hard and takes a lot of work, that does not elicit much maternal compassion from me. My equation is hard=good. There is no need to make things harder than they need to be but our proclivity to dodge difficulties just makes us only