• 07 Jul 2010 /  Inspirational /  by Trey

    This quote from Chapter 14 of the biography of Hudson Taylor (written by his son and daughter-in-law), is I think a verse to live by. It’s especially meaningful to me, because it aptly sums up what I have been learning in my life. The quote is from a letter that one of his friends sent him, which God used to illuminate this profound truth about faith in his life. I highly recommend reading the entire chapter, as it is profoundly encouraging, but this little snippet capture the main point very well.

    “He is most holy who has most of Christ within, and joys most fully in the finished work”
    How then to have our faith increased? Only by thinking of all that Jesus is and all He is for us: His life, His death, His work, He Himself as revealed to us in the Word, to be the subject of our constant thoughts. Not a striving to have faith . . . but a looking off to the Faithful One seems all we need; a resting in the Loved One entirely, for time and for eternity.

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  • 30 May 2010 /  Inspirational, Songs /  by Zach

    Just as a little add-on to Trey’s Assurance of Salvation series he has recently posted, I encourage you to give the old hymn Blessed Assurance as listen. I’ve found it’s a great song to sing when I’m having doubts about my faith. (Though I would prescribe worship to any number of spiritual conditions…actually, all of them.) Anyway, here are the words:

    Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine!
    Oh, what a foretaste of glory divine!
    Heir of salvation, purchase of God,
    Born of His Spirit, washed in His blood.

    This is my story, this is my song,
    Praising my Savior all the day long;
    This is my story, this is my song,
    Praising my Savior all the day long.

    Perfect submission, perfect delight,
    Visions of rapture now burst on my sight;
    Angels, descending, bring from above
    Echoes of mercy, whispers of love.

    Perfect submission, all is at rest,
    I in my Savior am happy and blest,
    Watching and waiting, looking above,
    Filled with His goodness, lost in His love.

    This is my story, this is my song,
    Praising my Savior all the day long;
    This is my story, this is my song,
    Praising my Savior all the day long.

    written in 1873 by Fanny J. Crosby

    My favorite arrangement of this song is by Jadon Lavik, off of his CD “Roots Run Deep.” Here’s the recording, complete with lyrics and random background pictures. (I recommend the CD!)

    What is/are your favorite hymn(s)?

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  • 19 Apr 2010 /  Inspirational, Poetry /  by Zach

    This is a poem by C.S. Lewis that I have been enjoying lately. Maybe you will too:

    All this is flashy rhetoric about loving you.
    I never had a selfless thought since I was born.
    I am mercenary and self-seeking through and through:
    I want God, you, all friends, merely to serve my turn.

    Peace, re-assurance, pleasure, are the goals I seek,
    I cannot crawl one inch outside my proper skin:
    I talk of love –a scholar’s parrot may talk Greek–
    But, self-imprisoned, always end where I begin.

    Only that now you have taught me (but how late) my lack.
    I see the chasm. And everything you are was making
    My heart into a bridge by which I might get back
    From exile, and grow man. And now the bridge is breaking.

    For this I bless you as the ruin falls. The pains
    You give me are more precious than all other gains.

    What does this poem say to you?

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  • 07 Apr 2010 /  Inspirational /  by Brian

    For those of you who read Trey’s most recent post, the link for Piper’s sermon Fight For Joy is here. You can listen and/or download it. Enjoy.

    Brian

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  • 30 Mar 2010 /  Inspirational /  by Riley

    “Paul said if Christ ain’t resurrected, we wastin’ our lives, but that implies that our life’s built around Jesus being alive.”

    -Lecrae

    The great theologian Lecrae (phrase copyright Frank Immanuel Weise III) is onto something, as he echoes the Apostle Paul who was definitely onto something when he wrote to the Corinthians about the central importance of the deity of Jesus Christ. “And if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain,” he says (1 Corinthians 15:12-18, pleading with the Corinthian church to cherish the resurrection and glory in the person and the power of Jesus Christ.

    If the Gospel is the theme song of the Christian, than Christ is the joyous, glorious chorus and refrain. He is the call to abandon all other hopes of salvation and satisfaction and to run into the arms of God-given grace. God’s grace is not cheap, though. Bonehoeffer reminds us of this in The Cost of Discipleship.

    Costly grace is the treasure hidden in the field; for the sake of it a man will gladly go and sell all that he has. It is the pearl of great price to buy which the merchant will sell all his goods. It is the kingly rule of Christ, for whose sake a man will pluck out the eye which causes him to stumble, it is the call of Jesus Christ at which the disciple leaves his nets and follows him.

    The grace found in the Gospel through Jesus Christ is a grace that demands everything from us. It is a grace that was manifested in abundant love on the cross, and it is a grace that compels us to follow and to abandon all other worldly avenues. If the central, all-glorified person of Christ we are justified and made clean, and our messages, ministries, missions, and very lives hinge on His person and work.

    How much do you focus on the central, glorious theme of Christ? When you think of the Gospel and its impact on your life, do you glory in Christ or in your own freedom? If you are saved, do you know that your discipleship allegiance is to Christ and to no other ambition? Think about Christ’s love for you and the tremendous bounds of costly grace poured out for the Church on the cross. When you think about the Gospel this Easter and continually throughout the year, pray and strive by the Holy Spirit to make Christ the center of your focus and the whole of your admiration and devotion. If our lives center around it, it’s the only option we have!

    εν Χριστώ

    -Riley

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  • 28 Mar 2010 /  Inspirational /  by Riley

    I’ve decided to do a Holy Week advent calendar on here. Each day this week I’ll be posting a reflection on the Gospel and the Easter message that I find to be particularly impacting. I felt the LORD really put this on my heart for a way to remind myself and us of what we really worship, 24/7, not just on Easter Sunday.

    Today I want to reflect on the infinitely important role of the Gospel. The Gospel is the triumphantly glorious theme song of the mercifully redeemed Bride of Christ. Hallelujah! Praise God for a song like that. Think about that. The Gospel is the triumphantly glorious theme song of the mercifully redeemed Bride of Christ. A song that we, the body, sing in our hearts when we gather with each other to be mutually edified and glorify the Name of the LORD. But what is it really all about? Where does it start? What does it all hinge on?

    Paul reminded the Corinthian church that when he was with them he “decided to know nothing among [them] except Jesus Christ and him crucified” (1 Corinthians 2:2) The Gospel wasn’t just the harmony or even the second tune or the underlying tone, it was the glorious theme of his mission work and ministry! The Gospel was so important to Paul that he told the church at Galatia that if they abandoned it for another ‘good news’ or another ‘new thing,’ that they should be accursed (Galatians 1:9). The Gospel was Paul’s foundation in his ministry. The glorious cross of Christ was the unifying theme of God’s redemptive love for man.

    On Easter, we will gather and spend time in serious corporate reflection on the day Christ died. May our hearts be grounded not on fleeting emotion, shallow feeling, or selfish pride but on the glorious unshakeable truth of the Gospel of our LORD Jesus Christ. That in our sin, in our rebelliousness, God came after us through Jesus Christ, an undeserved, unmerited atonement we could not begin to understand. That by the grace of God our whitewashed tombs, filled with dead men’s bones, are cleansed and stained red by the blood of the Lamb. Wow! Seriously, I hope you guys are excited about this. If the Gospel and Easter don’t make your or my heart quake in awe and grief at the tremendous sacrifice of Christ and then abound in joy in worship of the Father for freedom to have fellowship with God, may we seek scripture and the Holy Spirit earnestly to bring us to that place. It’s all about the Gospel, folks. Easter is all about the Gospel. The Church is all about the Gospel. Every day of our existence resounds with the theme of the Gospel.

    “As he was drawing near – already on the way down to the Mount of Olives – the whole multitude of his disciples began to rejoice and praise God with a loud voice for all the mighty works they had seen, saying ‘Blessed is the King who comes in the name of the Lord! Peace in heaven and glory in the highest!’ And some of the Pharisees in the crowd said to him, ‘Teacher, rebuke your disciples.’ He answered, ‘I tell you, if these were silent, the very stones would cry out.’ ” (Luke 19:37-40)

    On this Palm Sunday, may we resound with praises for the Gospel of Christ. It is the foundation of all that we are, all that we say, and all that we do as individuals and as the Body. Let’s be mindful of that.

    -Riley

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  • 06 Mar 2010 /  Cool, Inspirational /  by Riley

    Together For the Gospel.

    This is perhaps the most ownage thing I have ever seen. Let’s take a look at the speakers:

    Speakers

    1. Thabiti Anyabwile
    2. Mark Dever
    3. Ligon Duncan
    4. John MacArthur
    5. C.J. Mahaney
    6. Albert Mohler
    7. John Piper
    8. R.C. Sproul
    9. Matt Chandler

    Breakout Speakers

    1. Eric Bancroft
    2. Tony Carter
    3. Kevin DeYoung
    4. Greg Gilbert
    5. Brian Habig
    6. Joshua Harris
    7. Michael McKinley
    8. David Platt

    Um… that’s all I can say. It’s going to be amazing. I might as well start pooling my money together to purchase whatever sort of material they’re going to release after the conference is over.

    But seriously… AHHH!!!

    -Riley

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  • 04 Mar 2010 /  Inspirational, Musings /  by Riley

    Here are my two cents on the whole deal.

    Obviously, “God is love” is true. It has to be true. But I don’t think it means what we sometimes want to think it means.

    Obvoiusly, God hates sin, and condemns the sinner (Psalm 5:5, Psalm 11:5, Lev 20:23, Prov 6:16-19). And yes, Jesus was sent to cover this sin, poured out from the gracious mercies of the Father when we could not help ourselves (Rom 5:6). To tell the unregenerate that God loves them is beautiful, precious truth. It is life-direction-changing truth. But it is not the ultimate truth.

    Here’s what I mean. To tell someone that God loves them, especially a lost person, is good. It is very good. But if it’s your main point, then there’s a problem. Because as humans, and as unregenerate people before being covered by the blood of Jesus, we will take that to feel better about ourselves. “God loves us,” we will think, “so we will be okay.” “God loves me how I am.”

    God loved me so much that Jesus was sent so that I could be renewed and… live happily ever after? … have a better life? … feel better about myself? … get rid of that pesky sin  debt? No, God loved me and sent Jesus so that I could be cleansed, repent, and glorify Him. It’s all about God and it’s all about glorifying God through Jesus. The love we feel, the grace we experience, the righteousness that we wear, they are all side effects of the glorious main plotline: our glorification of God. So while “God is love” is true, it doesn’t always mean what we think it means. In light of the gospel, in light of Jesus, “God is love” means that everything God does, from destroying iniquity, from condemning the rebellious, from having beautiful mercy on the sinner, from bringing the Church through Jesus to glorify him, is love. They are all love. When we say “God is love,” we must means that “God is God.” They must be synonymous. If they are not, we run into the trap of fabricating a God or leaving the hard stuff out.

    This doesn’t mean we stop showing mercy on the brokenhearted, or being utterly devastated to proclaim the Gospel to the lost, or sympathizing with the hurting. But it means we do them for the right reasons. And this doesn’t mean we stop saying “God is love,” but that when we say “God is love,” we point people to God the Father through Jesus. We don’t point people to love. We don’t point people to acceptance or good feelings or a better life. We don’t point people to sympathy, or even mercy. We point them to Jesus. The love, the mercy, the acceptance, the grace, they are all beautiful side effects of knowing the Lord. They are all beautiful results of communion with the Father. They are all characteristics of God that we come to know by first seeking Him. A man without a watch continually needs to be told the time. What he needs is a watch, but he’s too attracted to the concept of knowing what the time is that he forgets to acquire the necessary device from which notification of the current time comes. We could continue to tell him the time, or we could direct him to the Source: the watch. When he gets the new watch, he realizes how much he has needed it. He pours over it, examines it, and excitedly wraps it around his wrist. He puts it to his ear and hears it ticking. He polishes the glass face. He also looks at the time. What was once the object of his search is now the result of a new Object: the watch. Knowing the time is now a result of knowing the Watch. No analogy is perfect, but what a lost person needs is Jesus. They don’t need or deserve good feelings, or acceptance, or provision, or mercy, or grace, or propitiation, or even to breathe their next breath. But when we as humans are directed to Jesus, as the current lost person would be and as we were, we are brought to new life. We enter into communion with the Father. We glorify and worship his Name. And praise the LORD! We also receive his love, and his mercy, and his grace, and we receive eternal communion with Him. Thinking like this makes the Gospel so much deeper and so much more beautifully scandalous.

    So what is my point? What am I trying to say? That the watch-less person isn’t looking for the watch. They’re looking for the time, and something to polish, and the sound of the ticking cogs, and the feeling of the solid timepiece on their wrist. But they need the watch. Let’s give them the watch! Even much more so, the lost person is looking for love and acceptance and forgiveness and mercy. But they desperately need Jesus. When they know Jesus, when they glorify Him, when they bring him praise and bow to the ground in worship of His name; when we do those things, it makes the blessing of forgiveness and the depth of mercy in the cross so much more profound. Why does Jesus matter? Not because we escape Hell. Not because he makes us feel loved and accepted. But because he brings us to God and imputes to us his righteousness so that we can worship the One True God. And praise Him! He allows us so many great blessings through this communion. But the object, the object is God. The way and life is Jesus. Giving the lost person a feeling of acceptance, or making them feel loved, these are not our objects. Jesus is. These things will be some of the glorious side effects of communion with a God who is love and life and goodness.

    That’s my point. It’s all about Jesus. If it’s all about good feelings and love and peace and grace and mercy, we will keep leading the watch-less man to search aimlessly for all of the qualities of the watch but not search for the true Object: the watch itself. We will keep leading the lost person to search aimlessly for all of the wonderful free gifts through Jesus but not search for the true Object: God Himself.

    Let’s give them the Watch.

    -Riley

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  • 24 Feb 2010 /  Inspirational, Musings /  by Zach

    Please give this a read. It’s an article by Shane Claiborne, the author of Jesus for President and The Irresistible Revolution. He makes some great points about Christians and Christianity, and I hope it will inspire you. It definitely inspired me.

    “To all my nonbelieving, sort-of-believing, and used-to-be-believing friends: I feel like I should begin with a confession. I am sorry that so often the biggest obstacle to God has been Christians. Christians who have had so much to say with our mouths and so little to show with our lives. I am sorry that so often we have forgotten the Christ of our Christianity.

    Forgive us. Forgive us for the embarrassing things we have done in the name of God.

    The other night I headed into downtown Philly for a stroll with some friends from out of town. We walked down to Penn’s Landing along the river, where there are street performers, artists, musicians. We passed a great magician who did some pretty sweet tricks like pour change out of his iPhone, and then there was a preacher. He wasn’t quite as captivating as the magician. He stood on a box, yelling into a microphone, and beside him was a coffin with a fake dead body inside. He talked about how we are all going to die and go to hell if we don’t know Jesus.

    Some folks snickered. Some told him to shut the hell up. A couple of teenagers tried to steal the dead body in the coffin. All I could do was think to myself, I want to jump up on a box beside him and yell at the top of my lungs, “God is not a monster.” Maybe next time I will.

    The more I have read the Bible and studied the life of Jesus, the more I have become convinced that Christianity spreads best not through force but through fascination. But over the past few decades our Christianity, at least here in the United States, has become less and less fascinating. We have given the atheists less and less to disbelieve. And the sort of Christianity many of us have seen on TV and heard on the radio looks less and less like Jesus.

    At one point Gandhi was asked if he was a Christian, and he said, essentially, “I sure love Jesus, but the Christians seem so unlike their Christ.” A recent study showed that the top three perceptions of Christians in the U. S. among young non-Christians are that Christians are 1) antigay, 2) judgmental, and 3) hypocritical. So what we have here is a bit of an image crisis, and much of that reputation is well deserved. That’s the ugly stuff. And that’s why I begin by saying that I’m sorry.

    Now for the good news.

    I want to invite you to consider that maybe the televangelists and street preachers are wrong — and that God really is love. Maybe the fruits of the Spirit really are beautiful things like peace, patience, kindness, joy, love, goodness, and not the ugly things that have come to characterize religion, or politics, for that matter. (If there is anything I have learned from liberals and conservatives, it’s that you can have great answers and still be mean… and that just as important as being right is being nice.)

    The Bible that I read says that God did not send Jesus to condemn the world but to save it… it was because “God so loved the world.” That is the God I know, and I long for others to know. I did not choose to devote my life to Jesus because I was scared to death of hell or because I wanted crowns in heaven… but because he is good. For those of you who are on a sincere spiritual journey, I hope that you do not reject Christ because of Christians. We have always been a messed-up bunch, and somehow God has survived the embarrassing things we do in His name. At the core of our “Gospel” is the message that Jesus came “not [for] the healthy… but the sick.” And if you choose Jesus, may it not be simply because of a fear of hell or hope for mansions in heaven.

    Don’t get me wrong, I still believe in the afterlife, but too often all the church has done is promise the world that there is life after death and use it as a ticket to ignore the hells around us. I am convinced that the Christian Gospel has as much to do with this life as the next, and that the message of that Gospel is not just about going up when we die but about bringing God’s Kingdom down. It was Jesus who taught us to pray that God’s will be done “on earth as it is in heaven.” On earth.

    One of Jesus’ most scandalous stories is the story of the Good Samaritan. As sentimental as we may have made it, the original story was about a man who gets beat up and left on the side of the road. A priest passes by. A Levite, the quintessential religious guy, also passes by on the other side (perhaps late for a meeting at church). And then comes the Samaritan… you can almost imagine a snicker in the Jewish crowd. Jews did not talk to Samaritans, or even walk through Samaria. But the Samaritan stops and takes care of the guy in the ditch and is lifted up as the hero of the story. I’m sure some of the listeners were ticked. According to the religious elite, Samaritans did not keep the right rules, and they did not have sound doctrine… but Jesus shows that true faith has to work itself out in a way that is Good News to the most bruised and broken person lying in the ditch.

    It is so simple, but the pious forget this lesson constantly. God may indeed be evident in a priest, but God is just as likely to be at work through a Samaritan or a prostitute. In fact the Scripture is brimful of God using folks like a lying prostitute named Rahab, an adulterous king named David… at one point God even speaks to a guy named Balaam through his donkey. Some say God spoke to Balaam through his ass and has been speaking through asses ever since. So if God should choose to use us, then we should be grateful but not think too highly of ourselves. And if upon meeting someone we think God could never use, we should think again.

    After all, Jesus says to the religious elite who looked down on everybody else: “The tax collectors and prostitutes are entering the Kingdom ahead of you.” And we wonder what got him killed?

    I have a friend in the UK who talks about “dirty theology” — that we have a God who is always using dirt to bring life and healing and redemption, a God who shows up in the most unlikely and scandalous ways. After all, the whole story begins with God reaching down from heaven, picking up some dirt, and breathing life into it. At one point, Jesus takes some mud, spits in it, and wipes it on a blind man’s eyes to heal him. (The priests and producers of anointing oil were not happy that day.)

    In fact, the entire story of Jesus is about a God who did not just want to stay “out there” but who moves into the neighborhood, a neighborhood where folks said, “Nothing good could come.” It is this Jesus who was accused of being a glutton and drunkard and rabble-rouser for hanging out with all of society’s rejects, and who died on the imperial cross of Rome reserved for bandits and failed messiahs. This is why the triumph over the cross was a triumph over everything ugly we do to ourselves and to others. It is the final promise that love wins.

    It is this Jesus who was born in a stank manger in the middle of a genocide. That is the God that we are just as likely to find in the streets as in the sanctuary, who can redeem revolutionaries and tax collectors, the oppressed and the oppressors… a God who is saving some of us from the ghettos of poverty, and some of us from the ghettos of wealth.

    In closing, to those who have closed the door on religion — I was recently asked by a non-Christian friend if I thought he was going to hell. I said, “I hope not. It will be hard to enjoy heaven without you.” If those of us who believe in God do not believe God’s grace is big enough to save the whole world… well, we should at least pray that it is.

    Your brother,

    Shane”

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  • 21 Feb 2010 /  Inspirational, Musings /  by Riley
    1. Am I praying constantly and consistently? Not only for myself but for my church and my leaders.
    2. Am I tithing generously? Are my money and other resources being given freely to my church and my leaders, or am I just skating by enjoying the fruits of the other parts of the body?
    3. Am I helping? Am I just along for the ride, or am I actively working to find places to get involved in the Body? Get to work!
    4. Am I rejecting selfishness? Church isn’t only about you. It’s about the Bride and it’s about full, ecclesiastical sanctification that may begin in an individual heart but ends when Jesus collects his whole, pure bride as One.
    5. Am I meditating on the Word? Is my day saturated with meditation on the Word, or am I drawing conclusions based on man’s ideas?
    6. Am I talking openly with my leaders? If my concerns are indeed serious, am I approaching my leaders directly or am I talking about them and my church  behind their backs? Am I a gossip and a stirrer of dissension?
    7. Am I seeking the Spirit’s peace? Am I ever content to trust God and what He is doing, or am I constantly fretting and never letting go of over-meditating on my concerns?
    8. Am I submitted to authority? Am I sensitive to and respectful of the leadership of my family leaders (parents) and church leaders (pastors, elders, deacons, etc) or are they objects of my disrespect and contempt? Am I willing to follow them even when it’s not easy for me?
    9. Am I concerned with the big picture? Am I actively seeking what God’s plan is in the future of my church and ministries, or am I just thinking about the now and the present? What am I doing to establish precedents for the future?
    10. Am I deeply burdened to give God the glory? Are my perspectives of God and the gospel big enough and the view of myself small enough*? Do I truly understand what Christ has done for me? Are my greatest desires to bring God the glory and to be like Jesus? What things do I need to lay at the foot of the cross so that I may further deny myself for the sake of Christ?

    * – not that truly, fully understanding while on this earth the fullness of God’s glory and the depth of our sinfulness is easy to accomplish, but that driving forward to further understand these things is key to sacrificial living for the gospel.

    A prayer: “God, may we be reminded of the plan that you have for your Church and for her growth and sanctification. May we be truly burdened for our local churches and their leaders and make commitments to be actively obedient to Scripture by loving them, taking part in them, praying for them, and being obedient to them. Thank you for our ability to worship in light of the blood of Jesus. May it continually cleanse us and remind us of how little we are and how big Your glory is.”

    Let’s be burdened for our local churches and have a renewed since of devotion to them and a renewed sense of respect and love for our leaders. It’s not all about me.

    -Riley

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