My 2013 New Year’s Resolutions

New Year's Resolution

Happy New Year! It’s official 2013. The Holidays are over and many of us are gearing up to face yet another year. As we do, resolutions will be made. Some will be kept, while others will be broken. Perusing a poll of New Year’s resolutions this morning, I find most dealing with weight loss, fitness, making more money, or quitting a habit – smoking, drinking, gambling. Instead of making a perfunctory resolution, let me offer you a few well thought out resolutions I am planning to keep, Lord willing, this year.

My New Year’s Resolutions

(1) Read the Bible – I have always wanted to finish one of those read the Bible through in a year plans, but I always lose steam. It’s not that I haven’t read the entire Bible, I have. It’s not that I don’t study the Bible in-depth, I do. I just haven’t ever finished a plan. The beginning of the year is great. All the boxes are checked, and I even make it through Leviticus and Numbers, but somewhere after that I fade off. This year is going to be different.

I recently subscribed to Table Talk Magazine, and I plan to do their daily devotionals each day, along with their read the Bible through in a year plan. If you are in the market for a solid devotional magazine, one that cuts out all the fluff, will help you deepen your understanding of God’s Word, and set you on a path to read the Bible in a year, I would recommend Table Talk.

(2) Read Calvin’s Institutes – Calvin’s Institutes represent a lifetime of thought and study. Even though they were written in the 1500’s, they are readable and useful for modern man. In order to accomplish my goal, I am participating in a Calvin’s Institutes Reading Group. A group you can participate in as well. If you have always wanted to read the Institutes, but like me, they have been sitting on your shelf for some time, join the group. We are planning on reading The Institutes in a year and discussing them along the way.

(3) Love My Wife Better – My wife is amazing! She is smart, intelligent, and funny. She loves God and our family. Even though I have great wife, I have to confess I don’t love her as well as I should. This year, I am repenting and loving my wife better. I am armed with my Bible, Tim Keller’s recent book The Meaning of Marriage, Justin Buzzard’s Date Your Wife, and Joel Beeke’s Friends and Lovers. Other than the Holy Spirit convicting me and God’s Word teaching me, I am hoping to learn much from these godly men about loving my wife better.

Final Thoughts

Those are my resolutions for this year. I share those with you in order to encourage you to think through your resolutions, and so you can pray for me and hold me accountable as the year goes on. Your prayers and a timely comment or two throughout the year asking how things are going might just be the encouragement I need to keep at it.

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My Top 10

Top 10

We are closing in fast on the New Year. Soon it will be 2013 and 2012 will be a thing of the past. Before we venture into the New Year, a time of reflection is in order. With that in mind, today I want to highlight my top 10 posts from this last year. These are not my favorite posts, but yours.

How did I determine your favorite posts? Not through complicated metrics or surveys. I simple looked at the stats to see which ones were viewed the most by my readers. Some of these you may remember, others you may not. Either way, these were the ones you clicked on the most last year. Without further ado, here are my top 10.

#10 A Christian View of Social Justice

#9 The Sanctifying Work of the Holy Spirit (part 1)

#8 Thoughts on Seminary from a Graduating Seminarian

#7 Faith + Nothing = Salvation

#6 For He has Risen, as He Said!

#5 What Does it Mean to be Godly?

#4 Colored Eggs, Scavenger Hunts, or the Resurrection

#3 Christian Meditation: What is it and What does it Involve?

#2 Celebrate the Savior for He has Risen

#1 The Keys to Unity

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Why Should I Repent?

Castle

In Matthew 4, Jesus begins his ministry. His first act is to preach, and His first message is:

Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”

Not necessarily a motivating message by today’s standards, or is it?

While many pastors desire to motivate their congregations to commit to Jesus with promises of health and wealth, Jesus motivates in a different way. Even though His call to repent and be His disciple is radical – He calls us to choose Him over our family, give Him the right to direct our career, our entire life, allowing Him to use us as His instruments for His purposes – it is worth it.

What is Our Motivation to Repent?

In the simple message Matthew records for us, Jesus provides us with motivation for why we should turn from our sins and become His disciple. “The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand” He proclaims, making the Kingdom of Heaven our motivation to repent.

Why is the Kingdom of Heaven a motivating factor?

(1) The Kingdom of Heaven is ruled by God Himself and is a perfect kingdom.

There is no injustice or unrighteousness in it, no oppression or poverty, no disease or sickness. It is a perfect kingdom. A kingdom for which we all long, and it is here now.

Jesus has come to put everything right. Where the fall marred the perfect kingdom as sin entered the world, hindering relationships and bringing death and disease, Jesus has come to set class struggle, family breakdown, disease, sickness, and death, right. He has come as the perfect King to establish a new and perfect kingdom. A king and kingdom for which we all long.

(2) All those not in the kingdom will be judged and sentenced to an eternity in hell.

John the Baptist is the forerunner of Jesus. His preaching minister preceded Jesus’, preparing the people for Jesus’ arrival. In his messages leading up to the ministry of Jesus, he provides us with our second motivation for repentance. He tells those who came out to him:

“I baptize you with water for repentance, but he who is coming after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing fork is in his hand, and he will clear his threshing floor and gather his wheat into the barn, but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire.” (Matt. 3:11-12)

He pictures Jesus with a winnowing fork in hand separating the chaff from the wheat. The chaff is burned, while the wheat is put in the storehouse. John’s message tells us that those who do not repent will be sentenced to eternity in hell. While those who do repent, will experience eternal life with Jesus in His kingdom.

For at least those reasons, we are motivated to repent of our former way of life and turn to the Lord.

Challenge

While the biblical motivation to repent differs from that of the world, it is right and good. So today, if you have never repented and turn to Jesus as your Savior, want you do so now? Turn from your sins toward the Lord. Call on Him as Lord and Savior. Submit to His rule over your life. Make the perfect King your King today!

Questions for Reflection

  1. Does knowing that Jesus is a perfect King who rules over a perfect Kingdom motivate you to follow Him?
  2. Can you think of other biblical motivations to repent?
  3. Can you think of other worldly motivations?

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How Should We Respond to the Good News of Jesus at Christmas?

Jesus in the Manger

Here we find ourselves on the eve before Christmas. During this time of year we will exchange greetings of Merry Christmas. Send Christmas cards to friends and family, and even post on Facebook sayings such as: “Jesus is the reason for the season” or “Let’s keep Christ in Christmas.”

These things are good. They not only force us to think about Christ, but they also force others who may never consider Jesus to consider Him. So it is important we keep Christ at the center of Christmas, in our conversations, and even in our social media posts.

While it is good and right for us to do these things, what I’m afraid of is that even though we speak about Jesus, write about Him, and celebrate His birth this time of year, we may not really know how the Bible calls us to respond to the good news of Jesus Christ.

How should we respond to the good news of Jesus Christ? In other words, what should we do after hearing the message of the gospel? The shepherds response in Luke chapter two acts as a model.

Before we look at their response, let me provide you with some background information, so we know to what news they were responding.

Background

Chapter two starts with a decree by Caesar Augustus that everyone must return to their hometown for a census. Not a big deal for most, except for the fact that the decree would increase their taxes. For Mary and Joseph on the other hand, it was a big deal. Mary was nine months pregnant and Joseph’s hometown was ninety miles away. Nevertheless, they made the trip.

After successfully navigating their way to Bethlehem, when they arrived, Mary went into labor. To top it off, there was no place in town for them to lodge except for a stable. Mary had no other choice but to deliver Jesus in a stable and lay Him in a manger.

Shepherds were close by in the fields that night tending their sheep when an angel appeared to them. He told them the good news of Jesus’ birth. A Savior had been born, the prophesied Davidic King was here, and He was close by in Bethlehem.

Before they could go check things out, a host of angels appeared singing. Their song further clues us into the magnitude of the historical event; Jesus would shine forth God’s attributes in the world because He is God and He would bring peace to men through His death on the cross.

That night, when the shepherds responded to the good news of Jesus, they did more than go to a hospital room with a few cigars and a blue balloon in hand with “It’s a boy!” printed on it. They went to see for themselves if the good news the angel relayed to them was true.

The Shepherds Response

The First Way They Respond is Immediately

In verses 15-16, Luke writes,

When the angels went away from them into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, “Let us go over to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has made known to us.” And they went with haste and found Mary and Joseph, and the baby lying in a manger.

After the angels left them, they went in haste to find the One the angels told them about. They did not delay, they went to search out the truth immediately.

Our response should be identical. When we hear the good news of Jesus – that He has come to save us, to restore our relationship with God, and make peace for us – we should respond immediately by seeking to confirm the truth of the message. The Shepherds responded in that way, and so should we.

If we are apathetic and lackadaisical, it means we have not yet grasped the magnitude of the message, or our need for a Savior. As well as it means we don’t understand that this world cannot offer us the peace that only Christ can offer.

The Second and Third Way They Respond is by Believing and Telling Others the Good News.

In verses 17-18, Luke writes,

And when they saw it, they made known the saying that had been told them concerning this child. And all who heard it wondered at what the shepherds told them.

After the Shepherds found Jesus just as the Angel told them, they believed and then told others the good news. Jesus, the Savior of the world, the King we are all awaiting, the Chosen Messiah, is here!

So those who believe the gospel message, tell others about the gospel message; that is the proper response, and it should be our response.

The Last Way They Respond is by Glorifying and Praising God. 

And the shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen, as it had been told them. (Luke 2:20)

After leaving, they responded by glorifying and praising God, which should be our response as well.

We use, read, and write these words frequently, but what do they mean? 

Glorifying God, which praise is wrapped up in, has two ideas attached to it. Those ideas are (1) Beauty and (2) Duty [1].

First, the idea of beauty. 

When someone or something is beautiful, we adore them; our imagination is captured by them; we praise, dote over, and admire them. As well as we talk about them, and long to look on them just to see more of their beauty. We do all this just for who they are not because we stand to have them do something for us.

Second, the idea of duty.

Duty entails service. Often, it means we do something to get something. When it comes to glorifying God, however, service is done not to get something, but just because of who God is. In other words, our service is selfless.

A few ways we can serve God selflessly and subsequently glorify Him by doing so is by:

  • Keeping His commandments.
  • Submitting to His rule over our life.
  • Telling others about Him.

When we do these things selflessly, expecting nothing in return, we glorify and praise God.

What does all this mean? How does this apply to us?

It all means that if we don’t adore, praise, talk about, if our imagination is not captured by, or we don’t long to look on Christ for just who He is, we are not glorifying Him.

It also means that if we don’t selflessly serve God by keeping His commandments, submitting to His rule over our life, or tell others about Him, we are not glorifying or praising Him either.

As well as it means we are not responding properly to the good news of Jesus.

Summary

How should we respond to the message of Jesus? How should we respond to the good news?

  1. Immediately by searching out the truth of the gospel message.
  2. Believe in the good news.
  3. After believing, we should tell others about the gospel.
  4. Lastly we should glorify and praise God.

That is how the shepherded responded to the message of the good news, and that is how we should respond to the message of Jesus this Christmas.

Why should we respond in this way?

Because God Himself has come to this earth to rescue us from death and destruction.

He has planned out His rescue mission before the foundations of the world. He has directed history, so that His plan would come about. He Himself has left His throne in heaven, was born as a man in a manger because there was no place for Him in the inn, He lived a perfect life, but went to the cross to die the death we should die, so that we might have life.

Isn’t that amazing? The King, the Creator of this world has come to rescue us from death and destruction because we rejected Him.

That is why we should glorify and praise God. That is why the message the Angel brought to the shepherds was good news. That is why we should respond to the good news of Jesus Christ.

Questions for Reflection

  1. Have you responded to the good news by searching out the truth?
  2. Have you responded to the good news by believing in Jesus?
  3. Have you responded to the good news by telling others the gospel?
  4. Have you responded to the good news by glorifying and praising God?

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[1] Tim Keller, Father Son and Holy Spirit, Sermon on Mark 1:9-13, January 15, 2006.

Does God Help Those Who Help Themselves?

Does God Help Those Who Help Themselves?

Recently, an article of mine was published at Gospel Centered Discipleship. I want to highlight that article today on the blog, so you will have access to it. Here is how it begins:

America is a hard working nation. The average workweek is no longer 40 hours a week, but 50, 60, or even 70 hours a week. Why do we work so hard and for so long? We have been told no one is going to do it for us and so we operate under the mentality that we have to go out there and earn it ourselves. While that is partly true in the secular world, it is not true when it comes to salvation found in Christ. Sadly, many have applied this concept of ‘earning it yourself’ to Christian life. They live by the motto ‘God helps those who help themselves.’ If we do our part, then God will do his part. Even though that may sound right to our ears and in our culture, it is not true.

You can read the rest of my article here.

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Gospel Witness through Community Unity

Church in the City

John 17 is known as Jesus’ High Priestly Prayer. He prays that:

  1. The Father would glorify Him in His mission (1-3).
  2. The Father would return Him to glory at the end of His mission (4-8).
  3. The Father would protect His representatives in the world (9-15).
  4. His representatives would be holy in the world (16-19).
  5. His representatives would be unified as they are on mission (20-23).
  6. His disciples would join Him in glory (24).
  7. His disciples would live and act as He did when He was in the world (25-26).

Seven things he prays in His High Priestly Prayer. I want us to focus in on His fifth petition. It comes in verses 20-23.

Let’s read verse 20:

“I do not ask for these only, but also for those who will believe in me through their word,

Throughout history the gospel has been spread, people have believed and passed that message on, and that process has continued all the way up to today, making believers along the way, including many of you reading this right now. With that in mind, the first thing this verse reveals is that Jesus prays not only for His current disciples, but also for us.

The second thing this verse reveals is that Jesus’ disciples are to be on His mission. What does that mission involve? It involves making disciples. How do we best go about calling others to be Jesus’ disciples? The remainder of His fifth petition gives us an idea.

How do we make disciples?

Disciples are made primarily through our verbal witness. The proclamation of the gospel tells others of the hope that is in us. Proclamation, however, is not all that is required. Disciples are also made through our community witness. How? Let’s look at verse 21.

that they may all be one, just as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me.

We act as a witness to the gospel by the way we relate to one another. Why? Verse 22 and 23a hold the answer.

The glory that you have given me I have given to them, that they may be one even as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become perfectly one,

Two things we see here:

(1) True unity requires heart change.

Change which only occurs by the gospel piercing our hearts.

(2) True heart change through the gospel allows us to image or reflect the Trinity for the first time ever.

Imaging the Trinity means that we love one another as the Father loves the Son and the Son loves the Father. It also means that we will be unified with one another as the Father and Son are unified.

The unity we show by imaging the Trinity allows us to act as a witness to the world for the gospel. Look a the remainder of verse 23.

so that the world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me.

When we are unified with one another, we not only give credence to our verbal witness, but we also act as a witness to a completely different way of life. Life that can only be lived through true heart change by the gospel.

So then, our community witness speaks just as our verbal witness does. One cannot be had without the other. If the community is not unified, then their verbal witness will not hold much weight. If a community doesn’t give a verbal witness, then those around them will not know why they are different. Both need to be present.

Unity takes work

Unity doesn’t come without work. Jesus knows that, which is why He prays His disciples would be unified. The work it requires though is worth it because it allows us to accomplish our mission in the world.

How do we become unified?

(1) We must first allow the gospel to pierce our hearts.

The gospel must change our hearts from a heart of stone to one that is gripped by the gospel.

(2) After that has taken place, we must continue to reflect on the gospel. 

The love Jesus showed us by dying for us must constantly be preached to ourselves. Reminding ourselves of His love, should spur a desire in us to love others in the same way Christ loved us, selflessly.

If everyone in the community selflessly loves one another, we will see a unity, a oneness, we, or this world, has never known before.

Challenge

So let’s love each other like we have never loved each other before, so that we may experience unity as we have never seen before, so that we may be a witness to our community for Christ. That is Jesus’ prayer, and that is my prayer as well.

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