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Archive for February, 2009

From A.W. Tozer’s The Pursuit of God:

O God, I have tasted Your goodness,
and it has both satisfied me and made me thirsty for more.
I am painfully conscious of my need of further grace.
I am ashamed of my lack of desire.
O God, the Triune God,
I want to want You;
I long to be filled with longing;
I thirst to be made more thirsty still.
Show me Your glory, I pray,
so I may know You indeed.
Begin in mercy a new work of love within me…
Give me grace to rise and follow You up from this misty lowland
where I have wandered so long.
In Jesus’ name. Amen.

(HT: JT)

And here is another quote I read today (HT: FI)

“That God is good is taught or implied on every page of the Bible and must be received as an article of faith as impregnable as the throne of God.”

- A.W. Tozer, The Knowledge of the Holy (New York, NY: HarperCollins, 1992), 128.

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How do you respond to trials?  Here are some possible responses from a study guide on “Adversity” written by Jerry Bridges.  Which one describes your normal response?

  • I often despise God’s discipline by viewing adversity as something to be escaped as quickly as possible.
  • I often lose heart, feeling that God is mad at me and must not love me very much when He allows me to suffer.
  • I often get angry, asking, “Why did this happen to me?” and accusing God of injustice. However, after an initial outburst, I get over my rage.
  • My anger at God may continue for months, even years.
  • I often accept hardship as coming from God’s hand for my good, even when the situation makes no sense to me.
  • I openly rebel against Him, thinking I know better what’s good for me.
  • My primary response is one of humble submission and trust.
  • I diligently apply God’s mind and will to my situation, trying to figure it out. I renounce my self-will and resign myself to God’s will—not always immediately, but usually in due time. I throw a “pity party” and invite as many friends as I can to behold what manner of suffering I endure.
  • I pray for relief from the difficulty and seek legitimate means to gain that relief.
  • Other

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Lig Duncan at Ref21 writes:

You may be encouraged by this CMDA interview with Andrew Jamison, who was on US Airways flight 1549 that crash landed in the Hudson River in NY last month, and his wife Jennifer. They give a strong Christian witness.flight-1549

Andrew and Jennifer are both 4th year medical students at the Medical University of South Carolina. They are members of my good friend and fellow Gospel Coalition Council member Buster Brown‘s congregation, the East Cooper River Baptist Church in Charleston, SC.

Andrew grew up outside of Charlotte, North Carolina and attended Clemson University majoring in Biosystems Engineering. Jennifer was born and raised in the Upstate of South Carolina and received her degree in Biology from Erskine College.

Andrew and Jennifer met in medical school and are in their second year of marriage. They have been on several medical mission trips overseas, serving communities in northern Africa.

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Gavin Ortlund lists 20 qualities of good listener.  How do you measure up?  I know I have some work to do!

1) Good listeners consider a person’s statements in relation to their presuppositions (as much as possible). They are willing to ask the question “how does this make sense to them?” and genuinely seek an answer to that question in evaluating another person’s opinion.

2) Good listeners are not hasty in making judgments. They are willing to think about something for a while. They don’t have to categorize everyone and everything immediately. “Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger” (James 1:19).

3) Good listeners pay careful attention to words. They don’t assume that an idea they are hearing is identical to an idea they are already familiar with simply because it has similarities. They respect the complexity of reality and are willing to make fine distinctions and treat each person, each statement, each idea on its own terms.

4) Good listeners ask questions. Not to embarrass or attack, but to clarify and distill.

5) Good listeners are not lazy. They work hard to understand. They exert energy in listening. For example, other people can usually tell that they are listening from their body posture and nonverbal communication.

6) Good listeners don’t feel threatened by not controlling the conversation. They are comfortable with silence. They give the speaker unthreatened, unhurried space in which to operate while communicating.

7) Good listeners understand that everyone has different communication styles, and adjust their listening to correspond to the speaker’s communication style. For example, if the speaker is shy, they draw the person out more. If they are talkative, they interject more. Etc. They don’t take a “once size fits all” approach to listening.

8) Good listeners interrupt intentionally and gently, rather than habitually and rashly.

9) Good listeners recall their own subjectivity and finitude as a listener. They make evaluations with the humility that corresponds to seeing parts, not the whole. They consider the angle and point of view from which they are listening.

10) Good listeners are willing to listen to something even if its hard to hear. They don’t stop listening as soon as they become offended or turned off by the speaker. They can receive a rebuke.

Proverbs 12:15
The way of a fool is right in his own eyes, but a wise man listens to advice.

Proverbs 15:32
Whoever ignores instruction despises himself, but he who listens to reproof gains intelligence.

Proverbs 13:1
A wise son hears his father’s instruction, but a scoffer does not listen to rebuke.

11) Good listeners do not unreasonably question the motives of the speaker. They make a good faith assumption that, all other factors being equal, the speaker is trying to communicate clearly and truthfully.

12) Good listeners don’t equate listening with agreeing. Good listeners understand that careful listening equips you to disagree well, because by listening you understand more clearly what it is that you disagree with.

13) Good listeners are not simply waiting to talk again when someone else is speaking. They actually value the contributions of other people.

14) Good listeners remember that you can learn from anyone. They realize that human subjectivity and fallenness is such that the most learned person can still learn from a little child.

15) Good listeners love people. They understand that listening is connected to every other aspect of relationships. The understand that there is simply no substitute for genuine affection for other people.

“The wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason, full of mercy and good fruits, impartial and sincere” (James 3:17).

16) Good listeners pay attention to nonverbal communication without discounting verbal communication. They pay attention to the fact that they are paying attention to both nonverbal communication and verbal communication.

17) Good listeners are willing to speak. They don’t equate listening with silence. They understand that the speaker may need them to communicate in order to further the conversation.

18) Good listeners understand that every act of communication takes place in a context or setting. They consider the way the context of a communication event shapes the meaning. For example, they understand social dynamics and the way different situations call for different kinds of listening.

19) Good listeners are willing to stop listening to something that is perverse, wicked, or dangerously foolish. They understand that in a fallen world there are some things that are so evil or foolish that they should not even be listened to. They know when to draw the line. They use common sense.

20) Good listeners understand how important listening is to a relationship. They don’t assume or underestimate the value of listening; they value and seek to cultivate good listening skills.

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What robs you of joy?

discouragedWhat are the things that rob you of joy? Messy relationships, the economy, your job, your health, your situation in life, a broken down car, something that was just in your reach and you just can’t get there?  What is robs you of your joy?

From Paul and so many other Bible and historical characters, we have learned that you can have joy when you experience difficult, painful, life-threatening circumstances.    John MacArthur has said, “One of the surest measures of a Christian’s spiritual maturity is what it takes to robe of his joy!” That’s so true and convicting.

There is only one thing that should rob us of joy:  sin! Sin robs us of our joy as Christians because it corrupts our fellowship with God who is the fountain of our joy.  Too often we allow wrong attitudes like bitterness, doubt, fear, and negativity to rob of us  or our joy.

But anything else other than sin need not rob of us of our joy.   Don’t let health issues, finances, personal relationships rob you of your joy!  Don’t let circumstances cause you  to question God’s love, fairness, justice, and wisdom!

And be ready for the unexpected in your life. When these happen, guard your heart against anger, bitterness, doubt, distrust, and fear. Those will be your immediate reactions.  Be on guard!

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Attitude!

The Apostle Paul demonstrates how important perspective and attitude are in our lives.  I saw this again as I preached from Philippians 1:12-14 this week.  Paul is in prison, his whole life and ministry seemingly put on hold for four years. But he writes with enthusiasm that all the setbacks he had experienced really resulted in the advance of the gospel.

What happens to us isn’t the most important!  How we respond to what happens to us is!   What happens to me doesn’t matter! What happens to the gospel matters!

Words can never adequately convey the incredible impact of our attitude toward life. Chuck Swindoll reminds us so pointedly,

The longer I live, the more I realize the impact of attitude on life.

Attitude, to me, is more important than facts. It is more important than the past, than education, than money, than circumstances, than failures, than successes, than what other people think or say or do. It is more important than appearance, giftedness or skill. It will make or break a company… a church… a home.

The remarkable thing is we have a choice every day regarding the attitude we will embrace for that day. We cannot change our past… we cannot change the fact that people will act in a certain way. We cannot change the inevitable. The only thing we can do is play on the one string we have, and that is our attitude… I am convinced that life is 10% what happens to me and 90% how I react to it.

And so it is with you. . .we are in charge of our attitudes.

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Stephen asks this question.

Answering honestly will make you better prepared to handle “the sin that so easily besets you.”

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Obama beats out Jesus

Well, not surprising really!  But this is a bit scary!

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What should I forsake?

Ask yourself:  What are the things in my life, my personal habits, my relationships, and my living situation that I need to forsake?

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Thinking Christians

Two great quotes on the importance of thinking to Christians. The first is from a non-Christian (as far as I know).  Alder was the promoter of the Great Book series years ago.  Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones was a famous preacher in London, England in the last century.

“Whoever passes by what is over his head condemns his head to its present low altitude; for nothing can elevate a mind except what is over its head; and that elevation is not accomplished by capillary attraction, but only by the hard work of climbing up ropes, with sore hands and aching muscles.”–Mortimer Alder

“Faith according to our Lord’s teaching in this paragraph [Matthew 6:25-33], is primarily thinking; and the whole trouble with a man of little faith is that he does not think. He allows circumstances to bludgeon him. … We must spend more time in studying our Lord’s lessons in observation and deduction. The Bible is full of logic, and we must never think of faith as something purely mystical. We do not just sit down in an armchair and expect marvelous things to happen to us. That is not Christian faith. Christian faith is essentially thinking. Look at the birds, think about them, draw your deductions. Look at the grass, look at the lilies of the field, consider them. … Faith, if you like, can be defined like this: It is a man insisting upon thinking when everything seems determined to bludgeon and knock him down in an intellectual sense. The trouble with the person of little faith is that, instead of controlling his own thought, his thought is being controlled by something else, and, as we put it, he goes round and round in circles. That is the essence of worry. … That is not thought; that is the absence of thought, a failure to think.”–Martyn Lloyd-Jones offering a a great critique to those who feel that faith and thinking are opposites; that a person who has faith is a person who refuses to use his mind (HT: Challies)

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