Monday, February 28, 2011

Rick Warren @ 2010 Desiring God Conference

Rick Warren @ 2010 Desiring God Conference



This post is behind times.  It is a day late and a dollar short.  

This video on Lane Ch's YouTube channel contains the Rick Warren presentation that he gave at the 2010 Desiring God Conference.  Due to various family needs that required attention, Warren could not make the conference in person.  Even for those that do not care (or even know) about the controversy the ensued hereafter John Piper invited Rick Warren to the 2010 DGC, this video serves as an illustration as to the make up of Warren's theology.  


Warren's presentation is played in it's entirety with frequent breaks via commentary from Chris Rosebrough from Pirate Christian Radio.  

  




Grace & Peace,
W. 

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Why Does the Bible Mention Unicorns?



Tying into the phenomenon of change that takes place within the realm of language, this video illustrates how "unicorn" is used throughout the Bible and how today's word usage is a source of confusion, etc.




Sunday, February 20, 2011

John Lennox - 2 Scratches vs 3.5 Billion Letters

John Lennox - 2 Scratches vs 3.5 Billion Letters


World views drive our perception and unfortunately this holds to even the disciples that bow and pay homage to the god of "chance and necessity".  


Below is a wonderful illustration that Dr. John Lennox provides to illustrate the hypocrisy that passes off as academia today. 




May it all be for His glory,
W. 


Monday, February 14, 2011

What is the Bible About?


What Is the Bible About?

My last piece was a response to a church window that I had seen with a slogan that simply read, "People Matter Most".  My response included a discussion pertaining to the role of the church and how people fit into the economy of God.  My assertion was that people do matter but from scripture, we can't conclude that people matter most.  In the economy of God, it is having a heart after God that matters most, the value of people is derived from the importance that they have to Christ.

In this video, Tim Keller does a wonderful job explaining that everything in the Bible points to Jesus.  Contrary to popular belief, Jesus is found in both Old and New Testament.  This video does a nice job at pointing out this illustration.



Saturday, February 12, 2011

People Matter Most

People Matter Most

If you read my piece on language from a couple of weeks ago, then you were briefly introduced to some of the idiosyncrasies of language.  Words have meaning but their meanings may change over time.  When I was a kid, for example, "a man of discriminating taste" would carry along with it the connotation of someone that had mastered the art of differentiation.  Today, however, racial overtones associated with "discrimination" may inject a connotation with the word that you may not want to relay - if you were simply trying to say, for example, that someone was familiarized with the finer things in life.

When I went to church back when I was a kid (circa 5 yrs old), I had not developed an elaborate theological portfolio yet but there was one thing that I did know; Church is all about God.  Unlike language, theological concepts should not change irrespective of the Church's goal of meeting ever changing needs in the community.  Jesus is the same today as He was yesterday.  God doesn't change and His word doesn't change.  God's word is not like shifting shadows that are here today and gone tomorrow.  Given my presupposition (Church is about God) that I've had since I was a child, can you imagine to my surprise when I noticed a church window that read, "People Matter Most"?

To be honest, I actually took a double look when I saw the church window.  I thought to myself, "People Matter Most?", I thought the church was about God?  If the Church is about God then doesn't it stand to reason that we should instead say "God matters most"?  For the purpose of presenting a visual for this piece, I took a picture of the "slogan" and continued to contemplate the purpose of the church. 

Let's not, however, assume that the biblical acumen of a five year old child can be relied upon.

What does the Bible say about the church? 

When Paul addressed the Corinthian Church in the 1 Corinthian epistle, he introduces an analogy where he compares the body of the church (body of congregants) to the body of Christ.  Paul tells the Corinthian Church that they are all members of one body.  Each body member (congregant) has specific jobs/roles in the kingdom of God the same as members of the body, i.e. ears, hands, elbows, etc. have specific jobs to perform in the body of Christ. 

Paul never says that all jobs have equal worth but stresses that all job functions are important. All have not been appointed to being an apostle, prophet or teacher, nevertheless, having a lower tiered job function does not alienate anyone from being a member of the body just the same. The ear, for example, isn't any less a part of the body because it's not an eye; if the whole body were an eye, where would the hearing be?

To further place the roles and purposes of the congregants and the church into context, Paul goes on to say that you can give away all of your possessions, feed the poor and sacrifice your body but all of it is meaningless if it is without love.  Paul ends his letter by telling us that the resources or gifts of the Church will fade.  Gifts of prophecy and knowledge will be done away with and tongues will cease, for example, but love never fails.  Out of faith, hope and love, in the economy of God, the greatest of these is love.

The church, in other words, is the collection of believers acting as members of the body of Christ.  God has appointed some for some jobs and others for other jobs.  Notice how Paul, however, said that you can feed the poor but if you don't have love, it is meaningless. Paul's not saying that people do not matter but at the same time, he's also not saying that people matter most. In God's economy, the greatest commandment is to love the Lord your God with all of your heart, soul and mind but the second one is like it; 

‘YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS YOURSELF.’

To keep matters in perspect, consider that James says that pure or undefiled religion is to take care of widows and orphans in their afflictions and that faith without deeds is dead.  Jesus also tells us in the parable of the Good Samaritan, in the book of Luke, for us to do the same as the man that shows mercy toward his neighbor in need.  As instructed from scripture, we care for people by and through taking care of widows and orphans in need, showing mercy towards our neighbor (in need) as well as loving our neighbor as we do our-self.  Our faith, in other words, should act in accordance with our deeds.  In our faith, we become imitators of Christ.  People matter, not because of any intrinsic value that they have but because they matter to Christ.  We love people because Christ loves people.  It is His Gospel that saves!  It is In the life that He gives us that we should die to ourselves;


"and He died for all, so that they who live might no longer live for themselves, but for Him who died and rose again on their behalf."

If we only exude love for others in accordance to others' intrinsic value, then surely we would would fall short of loving everyone.  Surely, just as well, would we fall short of loving everyone if we were to love others in our own strength.  Out of the love that Peter had for Christ, he promised to die for him prior to Jesus' capture.  In that same love/zeal, however, he feared the consequences of knowing him and denied Him three times. When Christ perfects us in love, however, He removes fear and frees us from bondage.  When Christ perfects us, we receive a new nature and we have a heart to be pleasing to Him.  People do not matter most, having a heart after God matters most.  God is spirit and He must be worshiped in spirit.  What better can there be for the interest of man than to be in God?  Is it not God that gives life?  If you being as evil and wicked as you are know how to give good gifts, then  how much more does our Heavenly Father know to give to us?  Let us rejoice and be glad that people do not matter most.  If people were to matter most then what is pleasing to them would matter most.  And what is pleasing to them?  A recent Barna poll inquiring about New Years Resolutions describes what is at the top of priorities that people have for themselves;

"When it comes to the types of resolutions people make, Americans not surprisingly focus on self-oriented changes. Among those planning to make resolutions, the top pledges for 2011 relate to weight, diet and health (30%); money, debt and finances (15%); personal improvement (13%); addiction (12%); job and career (5%); spiritual or church-related (5%); and educational (4%). Personal improvement responses included being a better person; giving more; having more personal or leisure time; organizing their life or home; and having a better life in general."

God is spirit and He must be worshiped in spirit.  The priorities that we have in our carnal nature denies the Kingdom of God glory and raises up carnal sinful man in place of what God desires.  I am so glad that people do not matter most.  I am so glad, instead, that God in His glory has decided to saved a stubborn stiff neck people that would reject Him as the corner stone if it were in their sovereignty to do as much.  Praise Him who died on a cross so that we may live in Him.  Praise Him that gave us grace and mercy as opposed to what we earned for the wages of sin is death.  

Before I conclude, please allow me to appeal to pastors of flocks.  Please rest in Him.  Rest in His word and do not be ashamed of it.  Do not be ashamed of the word that gives life.  Do not be ashamed of the author of our salvation.  I watched an interview on Penn Jillette yesterday that was very disturbing.  Penn Jillette is a part of Penn & Teller, the magicians/comedy team the performs all sorts of weird tricks.  

Jillette is an atheist.  Jillette is extremely vocal about his beliefs and his disapproval of God and the Bible.  Jillette claims that it was reading the Bible that made him an atheist.  In the interview that I watched, however, I noticed that he also said that he had parents that made him go to church.  He had a youth pastor that was very hip and relevant.  He dressed in cool clothes and "he would play Jim Morrison songs and the Beattles".   When Jillette asked questions about the Bible, his youth minister could not answer his questions.  It escalated to the point to where the youth minister called Jillette's mom and dad and politely asked them to stop sending Jillette to Sunday school.  According to Jillette's account, he was converting the class to atheism, etc.  

Although Jillette's atheism cannot be entirely blamed on his inept youth minister, it does say something about our modern churches.   Appealing to the youth via tactics that are designed to entice and allure is not only void in scripture but serves as an insufficient testimony in the hope that we have in Him.  Pastors, clergy, and ministers are not asked to be infallible theologians but at least provide some sort of guidance that has root in a credible apologetic.  At least provide a witness for the hope that you have in Him.  At least seek guidance in a weak area that you cannot deliver therein.  Pastors, do your flock right by being a worthy shepherd.  

In closing, the word of God instructs his flock to care for people the same that He cared for us. Resting in God's word is the most loving thing you could possibly do for another human being.  By resting in God's word, you will care for the orphan, widow and neighbor that is in need.  God is spirit and He must be worshiped in spirit.  Take on the spirit of God and love your neighbor.  Let us all be a testimony and give a reason for the hope that we have in Him.  Relevancy does not save men.  Let us be grounded in the word, the good news that brings with it salvation to all who believes.  Let us praise God for loving us first as well as pray for those that are determined to earn death if they are not found in Him.  

God bless you all.  People do matter for we are the gift that the Son is going to give to the Father but it is Him whom is the Alpha and Omega - for whom all things were made by and for Him.

May it all be for His glory,
W. 




Monday, February 7, 2011

What Vessels Like Hitchens Show Us...





 I stumbled along this piece tonight as I was going through my old "sent" emails that were directed at professors at Georgetown College.  I had written and shared this piece with one of my professors on January 5, 2010.  The following is mostly intact the same as I had originally written it in Jan of 2010.  I have implemented some minor changes as a way to slightly clean it up as well as making some changes for the sake of annotation.   
 

What Vessels Like Hitchens Show Us...

Christopher Hitchens is staunchly opposed to God. I have heard him in
debates and believe me when I say that he truly hates God with contempt.

This is not, however, to say that the man is not intelligent. You had better be on your game if you go against him in a debate. He makes some very astute observations and provides unsettling and daunting insight in regards to the truth vs. the worldview battlefield that we are called to fight the same as it is mentioned in the article that I have listed below (1);


"More to the point, though, you soon discover that many of those attending
are not so sure about all the doctrines, either, just as you very swiftly
find out that a vast number of Catholics don't truly believe more than
about half of what their church instructs them to think."


I'm not trying to cherry pick this and imply that Catholics are the only ones that Hitchens correctly observes as to being vulnerable to criticism per weak apologetics.  Prior to that statement, for example, he truthfully describes the way Calvinists cringe and hesitate to own up to being a Calvinist when asked in the sense that he (Hitchens) is going to hell.

Men like Hitchens, Bill Maher and Richard Dawkins or any other name that would be right at home as being listed as a guest speaker on an Atheist Alliance International Convention event (2) are instrumental, however, in serving a purpose. I discovered the Hitchens' article through reading an article about how Christians need to man up instead of being embarrassed or afraid to defend what we believe (3). The Hitchens' article also addresses men that he debates like Doug Wilson.  Hitchens states that he respects men that actually hold to doctrine and truly believe that biblical stories really happened and are not just metaphors.  Hitchens respects men like Wilson, for example, more than he respects the ecumenicals that have equated church as to being a "community organizing" effort.

Without men or vessels like Hitchens, we may become complacent in our understanding of God and loose our zeal to fight for the truth and to carry on "the good fight" by going out into the world to deliver the gospel so that lost men may be saved. As Paul would ask, however ala Romans, should we go on sinning so that God may be glorified more? 

Surely not! 
In other words, the accusations from men like Hitchens, Maher and Dawkins force men of faith to man up and deliver the truth.  Through a vigilant adherence to delivering the gospel and adhering to the Great Commission, God is given glory.  Men like Hitchens, Maher and Dawkins are serving a purpose in the Kingdom of God that they may never be aware of accordingly.  In spite of the purpose that men of this nature may serve, however, we should never forget that these men are lost and are in dire need of our prayers so that they may be saved.  Although they hate God with all of their hearts, they are no different than we were before we were born again with a new nature; a nature that is not at enmity with God; a nature that is not a God hater; a nature that is a result from having a heart of flesh as opposed to a heart of stone. By ministering to men of this caliber (along with any other lost soul) per the Great Commission, we continue to give God glory by being obedient to His will.

As it stands now, the aforementioned men are vessels of wrath according to Romans and even in that God will receive glory when His justice is rightly distributed according to His divine will that is after His own council.

May everything continue to act in accordance to God's will to give Him glory and may we be pleasing to our Heavenly Father by having a heart for the lost and to minister unto them so that they may be saved.



May it all be for his glory!

W.



(1) What I've learned from debating religious people around the world.
By Christopher Hitchens
Posted Monday, Oct. 26, 2009, at 11:21 AM ET
http://www.slate.com/id/2233586/pagenum/all

(2) Atheist Alliance convention featuring Richard Dawkins and Bill Maher coming soon July 6th, 2009 11:46 am ET
By Jake