Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Book review Enemies of the Heart by Andy Stanley

This book will preach!  Oh wait, that's right, it was based on a sermon series that Andy did at North Point.  When I say it'll preach, I mean it did!  It preached to me as I read it.  In typical Stanley fashion he brings his point home with a good mix of humor and story.  The point is the state of our hearts!

The book is broken into four parts.  Part one deals with the reality of the emotions that we all deal with and the need to confront just where these feelings and our responses to those emotions come from.  The truth is they come from within us.  That's something we don't like to admit!  We'd rather blame someone else for our "issues".  The problem is our heart.  The Bible describes it as the "well spring of life" and Jesus reminds us that from the "overflow of the heart the mouth speaks."  The problem therefore is a heart that is out of control and needs to be brought back under control or PROBLEMS will occur.

Part Two goes to his thesis that each of these emotions that seek to control us are based on a debt relationship.  Guilt: I owe you.  Anger: You owe me.  Greed: I owe me. Jealousy: God owes me.  I can certainly buy into the argument and as I stop to reflect upon my relationships with people and my response to individuals from time to time I can see one of these debts coming into play.

Part Three builds upon of these deadly emotions and provides solutions to dealing with them so they don't break relationships.  The first is perhaps the hardest.  Confronting Guilt.  Andy pushes the reader to come out into the open with his/her guilt.  He suggests that the power of secret is destroyed when guilt is brought into the light.  His thought is that our guilt stems from some secret that we hold onto and rightly suggests that confessing that secret breaks the powerful hold that guilt has on us.  This is the hardest because what he is suggesting, while liberating, also has the potential to break permanently a relationship if the one receiving the confession is not prepared to forgive.  Confession, while good for the soul, is risky because it lays the ball in the offended party's court.  The one confessing is laid open and can be left hanging.  But it is a risk worth taking to break the power of guilt.  The antidote to each succeeding emotion is so obvious that it seems ridiculous to mention but so critical to review and remember.  The antidote to anger is forgiveness.  The antidote to greed is generosity.  The antidote to jealousy is celebration.

Chapter 19, for me, made the whole book worthwhile.  It addresses our role in molding and training up our children.  They will learn from us (primarily) how to respond in most all situations that life throws our way.
"We cannot control everything our children experience, but we can influence how they process what life sends their way.  We can teach them how to guard their hearts against the inevitable firestorms of life. ... For starters we can teach them the importance of confession, forgiveness and generosity.  We can teach them to celebrate the successes of others.  We can pray.  We can model good habits..."
Enemies of the Heart is a book well worth owning, not just reading.  It is a book to refer back to often in order to help get a hold of our hearts and learn to guard them well (not just for our sake, but for the sake of our children and grandchildren).

I received a free copy of this book for review purposes from Waterbrook Multnomah Publishing.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Humility and Obedience: The way of the Cross, pt. 2

So Paul makes a summary statement in verse 5: "Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus."  Like that should be an EASY task!!!

He gave up...
             ...equality with God.

So
      ...no rights or sense of entitlement!
      ...no clinging to things
      ...open hands not tight fists!
      ...no demands or conditions or expectations...
      ...just a flat out..."Here I am, I'm yours."

Made himself... nothing.


Now...hang on a second...I don't like how this is sounding!
      ...made himself nothing by taking the nature of a servant!
      ...SERVE OTHERS...no rights...no union...
      ...humble, faithful, dutiful, obedient,
      ...submissive...dirty jobs...no glory...
      ...lousy pay and working conditions and abuse and a lack of recognition...no gratitude...

But wait a minute...taking on the nature of a servant being made in human likeness...so that's humbling...for us!  He did all of this being like ME!

FOUL!  Not fair!  Jesus...you were still God (even though man!) You had an unfair advantage!!!
      ...No wait a second...what else did Paul say in describing Jesus?
      ...he humbled himself and became obedient to death - even death on a cross.
      ...Okay...I take it back...you had no advantages.
      ...You had the same conditions that I do...you had to humble yourself...live like me...submit like me...eventually die like me...NO WAIT...I don't have to die like you...on a CROSS!

YOU DID THAT FOR ME!

The way of the Savior...is humility...submission...surrender...obedience...service...sacrifice...death.
All just because?  No!  BECAUSE OF ME.

You walked the way of the Savior...for ME!

You took my place...you bore my cross...you died my death!

WOW!

Humility and Obedience: The way of the Cross, pt. 1

A Tale of Two Attitudes...

Your attitude stinks!  You need an attitude check Mr.!  Watch your attitude!  Don't give me any attitude!  That boy's got some attitude!  I don't like you attitude!

He's got a great attitude considering...!  He's demonstrated a great attitude in class this year!   Performance review: Demonstrates a great attitude and a hard worker!  Always has a positive attitude...!  Never a complainer and always a great attitude!

Attitude reflects our outlook and heart.  If we have a positive outlook on...whatever... we usually demonstrate a positive attitude.  We're cooperative; don't complain; try to be helpful; try to encourage others; etc.  Our heart is in the right place - a place of humility and service which requires obedience.  We're not out to please ourselves or serve ourselves.  We're not selfish or self-absorbed.  We're focused on the good of others!

So Paul (Philippians 2:5) has the audacity to say that we should always have the same attitude as that of Christ Jesus.

Never complaining...
               Always serving...
                                              Completely humble...
                                                                                             Obedient without hesitation...

Ouch!  Is that really possible?  My excuse is, "Well...Jesus is God after all!  He is perfect!  And I am most definitely not!  God doesn't expect me to be perfect after all!"

No he doesn't!  Or does he?  Scripture does say, "Be holy as I am holy!"  "Be perfect as my heavenly father is perfect!"

What?  Hang on a second!  Perfection?  Not possible this side of heaven!  HELLO!!!!

I won't be...because I am a sinner...I can be because I have a Savior!

The potential is there...unfortunately...my attitude gets in the way.

Help me Jesus to live out the reality of verse 5, "In your lives you must THINK and ACT like Christ Jesus." (NCV)

Book Review of Love & War by John and Stasi Eldredge

"We live in a love story, set in the midst of war. Love is our destiny, and all hell is set against it. Really, it explains so much. We wake each morning and find that we have to fight our way back to all that is true; we have to fight off the thousands of reasons to settle for less than the life we were created for. Our bodies awaken but then our hears and souls must awaken, too, so that we might play our part in the Grand Affair. And God has made our hearts in such a way that nothing awakens us quite like some great mission which is ours alone to fulfill."

In typical Eldredge style you are drawn to this book not because of it's profundity but because of it's simplicity (which is often the most profound).  It is a practical book!  It is a helpful book!  It is a challenging book.  More than just a good read (which it is); it is an honest take on the real struggles of marriage and how to find your way to something beautiful in your marriage.

If you are honestly seeking to save your marriage or just make your marriage the best that it can be, then you need to read Love and War.

(I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review.)

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Book Review of Radical Together by David Platt

WARNING: This book is detrimental to mediocrity!

Radical Together is an excellent follow-up book to Radical.  In Radical we were challenged by the thought, "...in a world of urgent spiritual and physical need, gospel-believing, God-exalting men and women do not have time to waste their lives pursuing a Christian spin on the American dream."  Now in Radical Together David Platt challenges the local church to, as his subheading describes it, "Unleash the People of God for the Purpose of God."

A thorough reading of the book leaves no doubt that Platt loves the church but that his vision of the church is much broader and more focused at the same time.  Broader in the sense that the church is much more than the local church.  He makes constant references to the Church that is spread out through out the world.  More focused in the sense that the local church does not exist simply for the local church; the local church exists to take the Word of God and make disciples of all nations.

While there can be no questioning his love for and commitment to the local church Platt identifies some problems in the "average" local church. "...I am convinced that in the church we can - unknowingly and unintentionally - actually prevent God's people from accomplishing God's purpose.  If we are not careful, our activities in the church hinder the advancement of Christ's kingdom."

Platt then develops that thought around 6 ideas to help churches become "unleashing" agents - unleashing people into the world with the Gospel.  The 6 ideas include:

1. One of the worst enemies of Christians can be good things in the church.
2. The gospel that saves us from work saves us to work.
3. The Word does the work.
4. Building the right church depends on using all the wrong people.
5. We are living - and longing - for the end of the world.
6. We are selfless followers of a self-centered God.

Each of these ideas pushes the local church and the individual believer to make a life altering choice.  "If you and I want our lives to count for God's purpose in the world, we need to begin with a commitment to God's people in the church.  God has called us to lock arms with one another in single-minded, death-defying obedience to one objective: the declaration of his gospel for the demonstration of his glory to all nations."

The question that the 21st century North American church must wrestle with is, is this a worthy goal?  Is it a goal worth giving our lives to?  "It is worth it for billions of people who do not yet know that Jesus is the grave-conquering, life giving, all-satisfying King.  And it is worth it for you and me, because we were made to enjoy the great pleasures of God in context of total abandonment to his global purpose."

If the local church can honestly wrestle with the six ideas Platt presents in light of their specific mission and in the context of God's broader mission, we have the potential to call our people to a Radical lifestyle and then unleash them to accomplish God's purposes in our world and in so doing "live radical together in eager anticipation of the day when we will see his face and, as a community encompassing every nation, tribe, tongue, and people, enjoy his beauty for all of eternity."

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Book Review of The Next Christians by Gabe Lyons

I just finished The Next Christians by Gabe Lyons and absolutely loved it!

The church whined and moaned when President Obama declared America to "no longer be a Christian nation," so the catchy tag line on the jacket cover caught my eye: The Good News about the end of Christian America.  And Good News there is!

The Good News is that the church in America is being forced to return to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and that's the core of the book.  Forced to take a serious look at what is our primary calling and not get caught up in secondary issues.  Time is too short for secondary issues.

The final chapter was the best chapter to read.  Lyons writes, "No longer embarrassed to claim the label (Christian), these Christians (Next Christians) have finally recovered what many who have gone before them always understood about the faith: namely, that the Christian view of the world informs everything, that the Gospel runs deep, and that the way of Jesus demands we give our lives in service to others. Jesus's atonement was not only meant to be a simple ticket to heaven - it carried consequence for how Christians live their lives on earth today."


The Good News is that Christians are viewing the Gospel of Jesus Christ as all encompassing, another words it effects all of life.  It requires the Christian to move outside the "safe zone" and move into a world that is skeptical and even hostile to the church.  The Good News is that this is what the early church faced and because of her commitment to the "whole" Gospel the world was changed.

Lyons writes, "The bottom line is that the Christian has a calling and a responsibility to think, work, and live in terms of how the world ought to be in contrast to reacting to how it really is."  The "power of ought" that flows from the heart of Jesus and invigorates the heart of Christians drives us to take the Gospel to the Market, to the arena, to the schools, to the slums, to the women and children sold as sex slaves, to caring for our world. It challenges us not just to hoard the Gospel but to embody the Gospel and give it away to those who need it the most, simply because they are greatly loved and valued by God.  Jesus described his mission in Luke 4:18-19 and it is incarnational and touches all areas of society.

I highly recommend The Next Christians if you want to have your present view of Christianity and the role of the church challenged and your worldview turned upside down.

(I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review.)

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Experiencing Grace in Lent

Experiencing Grace in the Desert
Lent is a season of soul-searching and repentance. It is a season for reflection and taking stock. For many, it is a time to give up something like TV or candy or smoking or certain kinds of food. It is also a time to serve others.  Service is a way to look beyond our selves and give to others. The following is a brief reflection leading up to what may be a better view of Lent for some.
Lent owes much of its spirit to the forty days Jesus spent in the desert preparing for his ministry. We say he was "tempted" there, but a more accurate translation may be "tested." The Jewish view of the desert was an abode of demons, especially that part of the desert where winds would howl around tall, rough stone. It must have been terrifying at night: dark, looming shapes, unearthly wailing of wind, and nothing else. In this place, Jesus was offered the opportunity to be the wrong kind of messiah. He rejected each possibility.
When Jesus entered the desert, he left behind all the expectations of others, all the hopes, all the illusions. It was just Jesus and the Father, and the Holy Spirit. But in solitude, demons come. No role is more dangerous than the reformer. There were at least three wrong ways to be the Messiah, and Jesus rejected them all. The defeat of Satan during this testing hinted at the final defeat of evil through the Cross and Resurrection.
We are people of illusions. We think we understand God, we think we know ourselves and those around us. We plan our lives and are shocked when these plans fall through. We impose our wills on God or even say we know His plans. Jesus did not have such illusions, but we have illusions about Jesus. In the desert, Jesus had no illusions of his own to face and destroy: he was tested for our sake, so we would know who he was not. He did not come to bribe us with earthly bread, or astonish us with feats of invulnerability. He did not seek world domination or command an army. He simply did the will of the Father.
The desert experience is about deprivation. Most of the world experiences it involuntarily. For many people, however, deprivation is a great evil, and to be avoided at all costs. In deprivation, we discover that we are not all-powerful. We are slaves to our bellies, to the opinions of others, to pleasure. We cannot bear pain, so we take a pill. We cannot bear growing old, so we dye our hair. Like Darth Vader in Star Wars, we replace our humanity with technology until there is little of ourselves left. Doing without can strip away some of the illusions and give us a glimpse of truth.
During Lent, we have the opportunity to hear voices that are usually lost in the din of pleasure and meaningless talk. We can enter into a private desert even in the midst of the world and face our own demons. We can tear down false idols only to be heartbroken at finding others behind them. If we are brave, we can run through this desert trying to find the real God amid the gods.
Thomas Merton writes about a kind of “dread.” It is the nagging sense that we have missed something important or that we have somehow been untrue to ourselves. It may feel like a crisis of faith, as though we doubted God. In reality, we doubt the false images of God that we ourselves have created. We doubt the bold pronouncements we make about our independence or open-mindedness. This “dread” is heightened by the fact that the God beyond our imaginings is so close to us, although we know Him not. Thoughts cross our minds about this, but we push them away. Perhaps as you read this you are thinking, “I’m not that clueless. I have faith. I know God personally.” Think again.
In this life, we try to make some progress in discarding our “disordered attachments.” At death, we will no longer have a choice. We cannot enter Heaven burdened with a thousand foolish attachments. As our bodies lie rotting, there will be no more illusions about the worth of attractiveness. As others claim our possessions, they will finally have their proper value to us. When we stand in judgment before God, we will have no illusions about our sanctity or goodness. All will be laid bare, and there will be no more hypocrisy, lies, or illusions. It is far better to begin discarding our foolish attachments in this life, and Lent is a good time to begin this work. The best time to start, however, is always now.
(Excerpts from whitestonejournal.com)

A Daily Bible Reading Plan for Lent beginning March 9, 2011

Lord God, by Your Word…

Fill Me with Your Life-Giving Spirit

3/9 Ash Wednesday: Luke 4:1-13
3/10 Thursday: Romans 8:1-17
3/11 Friday: Galatians 5:16-26
3/12 Saturday: Ephesians 4:17-24

Week 1 - 3/13-3/19

Fill Me with a Spirit of Repentance and Forgiveness

Sunday: Psalm 51
Monday: Matthew 6:5-15
Tuesday: Matthew 18:21-35
Wednesday: Luke 15:11-32
Thursday: Ephesians 4:25—5:2
Friday: 1 John 1:5-10
Saturday: Psalm 130

Week 2 - 3/20-3/26

Fill Me with a Spirit of Hope and Trust

Sunday: Genesis 12:1-9
Monday: Genesis 22:1-19
Tuesday: Isaiah 51:1-16
Wednesday: Luke 12:22-34
Thursday: Romans 4:13-25
Friday: Hebrews 6:13-20
Saturday: Psalm 62

Week 3 - 3/27-4/2

Fill Me with a Spirit of Gratitude and Thanksgiving

Sunday: Luke 17:11-19
Monday: 2 Corinthians 9:1-15
Tuesday: Ephesians 5:6-20
Wednesday: Philippians 4:1-9
Thursday: Colossians 3:1-17
Friday: 1 Chronicles 16:7-36
Saturday: Psalm 103

Week 4 - 4/3-4/9

Fill Me with a Spirit of Love and Servanthood

Sunday: Matthew 23:1-12
Monday: Mark 10:35-45
Tuesday: John 15:1-17
Wednesday: Romans 12:9-21
Thursday: Romans 13:8-14
Friday: 1 Corinthians 13:1-13
Saturday: 1 John 4:7-21

Week 5 - 4/10-4/16

Fill Me with a Spirit of Discipleship and Commitment

Sunday: Luke 5:1-11
Monday: Luke 9:22-27
Tuesday: Matthew 10:16-33
Wednesday: Matthew 10:34-42
Thursday: John 15:18-27
Friday: 2 Timothy 2:1-13
Saturday: 2 Timothy 3:10-17

Week 6 - 4/17-4/23

Fill Me with a Spirit of Obedience and Humility

Sunday: John 13:1-20
Monday: Philippians 2:1-11
Tuesday: Psalm 22
Wednesday: Isaiah 52:13—53:12
Thursday: Luke 22:39-71
Friday: Luke 23:1-56
Saturday: Hebrews 4:14—5:10