theologyTag Archive -

Jesus Never Wastes Our Pain

I thought I’d share this message of encouragement that my Facebook friend Tasiyagnunpa Livermont wrote me recently. If you’re going through a valley, perhaps her words will encourage you as well.

“Being a Christian doesn’t exempt us from suffering…in fact Jesus said we’d suffer as He suffered.

Paul had to deal with an eye disease when visiting one of the churches in the midst of trying to preach there, nevermind all the beatins and stonings…and it can be a faith test that even in the midst of serving Him, we get sick or something happens…can we trust Him to still love us and stand with us during these valleys…to turn everything to the good of those who trust in Him? I live to give Him glory…but when I can’t do works…do I still trust He’s with me?

The Word says NOTHING can separate us from the love of God. I may pray for healing and miracles…but the true miracle is clinging to Jesus so tightly that we can get through these things without bitterness and with new lessons that we couldn’t have seen otherwise. Praying for you and your family. (His will is to heal us…but sometimes the healing comes in ways we wouldn’t expect…Jesus is Redemption…and can turn whatever the world throws at us into something amazing.) Jesus rocks like that.

I know I’m preaching to the choir so to speak, but just wanted to encourage you. Jesus never wastes our pain.”

2010 Reading Plan

Each year I create an intentional reading plan as part of my personal growth and development. There are bound to be exceptions as I discover new titles throughout the year, but this pretty much tells the story of the knowledge that will be dropped in my mind. There are even a few re-reads.

Look it over and let me know any books on this list that you’ve read and what you liked/disliked about them.

Ragamuffin Gospel – Brennan Manning (Annual Re-read)
Renewal as a Way of Life – Richard Lovelace
Counterfeit Gods – Tim Keller
Untamed – Alan Hirsch
The Canon of Scripture – F.F. Bruce
A Million Miles in a Thousand Years – Donald Miller
Hear No Evil – Matthew Paul Turner
Spiritual Leadership – J. Oswald Sanders
Eat This Book – Eugene Peterson
A Long Obedience in the Same Direction – Eugene Peterson
The Jesus Way – Eugene Peterson
The Blue Parakeet – Scott McKnight
Slaves, Women, and Homosexuals – William Webb
The Homiletical Plot – Eugene Lowry
Sex, Lies, and Religion – Randy Elrod
The Divine Commodity – Skye Jethani
Resident Aliens – Stanley Hauerwas
Galatians – Martin Luther
Forgotten God – Francis Chan
Doctrine – Mark Driscoll and Gerry Breshears
Finally Alive – John Piper
Heaven – Randy Alcorn
Simply Christian – N.T. Wright
Church in the Making – Ben Arment
The Trellis and the Vine – Colin Marshall and Tony Payne
The Normal Christian Life – Watchman Nee
The Meaning of the Pentateuch – John Sailhamer
The Lost World of Genesis One – John Walton
The Gospel-Driven Life – Michael Horton
From Eternity to Here – Frank Viola
Messy Faith – A.J. Gregory
Your Jesus is Too Safe – Jared Wilson
Primal – Mark Batterson
The Gospel in a Pluralistic Society – Lesslie Newbigin
The Return of the Prodigal Son – Henri Nouwen
Classic Christianity – Thomas Oden
The Seeking Heart – Fenelon
Leading on Empty – Wayne Cordeiro
How People Change – Timothy Lane
Instruments in the Redeemer’s Hands – Paul Tripp
The Book of God – Walter Wangerin
Decision Making and the Will of God – Garry Freisen
3 Crucial Questions About Spiritual Warfare – Clinton Arnold
The Cross of Christ - John Stott
The Cost of Discipleship – Dietrich Bonhoeffer
A Short Life of Jonathan Edwards – George Mardsen
Studies in the Sermon on the Mount – David Martyn Lloyd-Jones
Story: Substance, Structure, Style, and The Principles of Screenwriting – Robert McKee
Linchpin – Seth Godin
Drive - Dan Pink
A Whole New Mind – Dan Pink
Switch – Chip and Dan Heath
Thinkertoys – Michael Michalco
Have a Little Faith – Mitch Albom
My Life Outside the Ring – Hulk Hogan
The Lost Symbol – Dan Brown
East of Eden – John Steinbeck

Someone Stole My Affections

Affections are a tidal wave.

They curl up into great heights of bliss and in a moment come crashing down.

This is the wave I have been riding for a while now.

How easily I forget Habakkuk 3:18, “I will take joy in the God of my salvation.”

I too often misplace my affections into fumbling hands.

Rather than resting them in the God of my salvation.

Someone had stolen my affections.

And that someone was me.

It’s time to return them to their rightful owner.

What Project Church Believes

thestory

The Statement of Faith for Project Church.

We believe in God’s Epic Story.

This epic is revealed within the grand narrative of Scripture in a collection of 66 books known as the BibleInspired by God yet written by human handsthe infallible words of Scripture are God-breathed,without error, and are the supreme and final authority for life and faith.

In eternity, this story was formed.  It begins with the Author and Creator of all things- the onetruesovereign God. He exists in community with Himself as Father, Son, and Spirit yet remains one God. He is altogether goodholyjustwisepowerful, and loving.

In love, the Author created a world of wonderbeauty, and harmony for his masterpiece creationhumanityCreated in His image, human beings walked in relationship with the Creator and enjoyed the paradise of His creation. This is the beginning.  All was as it should be.

Then the story took a dramatic turn. Something had gone terribly wrong.

Sin entered the story through the deception of the evil one and the rebellion of humanity. Creation had fallenparadise was lost, and separation came between humanity’s relationship with God and each other. Life was broken and nothing was as it should be.

In the darkest moment in human history, sin bled into the story resulting in shamesufferingpain,distrustdespair, and pride. Although still bearing the image of God, all of humanity would now live in a fallen state of sin unable to rescue ourselves.

In the midst of this horrific event, hope and restoration is promised by God as He reveals the climax of His storyGod would become a man with a mission to rescue his beloved creation and crush the evil serpent. God would write clues of His arrival into the story through various messengerslawsevents, and promises. All of which would be fulfilled through the hero of God’s epic: Jesus Christ.

Jesus entered human history miraculously as he was conceived by the Spirit of God and born to a virgin motherFully God yet fully humanhe did what humanity could not do. Jesus lived a perfectsinless life teaching us to love God and others as ourselves. But it was his exclusive claim to being the only way to God, as well as his claim of being God, that led to his arresttorture, and execution on aRoman cross.

He would show his great love for us through his willful yet excruciating sacrifice on the cross.  There is no greater love.

It is on the cross where the hero redeemed and rescued his beloved creation.
It is on the cross where the hero became our sin, enduring the just wrath of God.
It is on the cross where the hero became our substitute and paid the penalty for our sins.
It is on the cross where those who believe in him have right standing before God.
It is on the cross where we are cleansed from the curse of sin- past, present, and future.
It is on the finished work of the cross where Jesus died for us so that we might live for him.

But the story doesn’t end there…He came back!

Three days after being buried in a tomb, he rose from death defeating hellconquering sin, and crushing the sting of death. He appeared to hundreds of witnesses and then physically ascended into Heaven and is presently seated at the right hand of God the Father.  Salvation is only found by God’s saving grace in the person and work of Jesus Christ.  God’s grace is not earned, it is freely given to all who truly believeThose who believe will spend a life and eternity in relationship with HimThose who don’t, get exactly what they want, a life and eternity apart from a relationship with God.

The story continues to be written through the person and work of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit of God was promised by Jesus to supernaturally guide our storieswork in the hearts of humanity, and draw us near to Jesus. The Spirit resides within us and works to teach and transform us,  help us when we are in needconvict us of our sinsecure our salvation, and empower us with spiritual gifts to advance the Kingdom of God on earth today.

The mission of Jesus was, and is, crystal clear: to seek and save that which was lost.  And that’s exactly what He did…and what He’s doing.

Through the Church, followers of Jesus are united as one body made up of various expressions of church.  They gather in prayer, worship, teaching, community, and mission with baptism and the Lord’s Supper being visible expressions of the gospel story.

The mission of the Church is to make disciples of Jesus and join God in the renewal of all things by announcing the good news of the Kingdom of Heaven and telling the story of God’s amazing grace, the gospel of Jesus Christ, to the ends of the earth- starting in our local communities.

Today, Jesus Christ reigns supreme as King of kings and Lord of lords. This epic will end when the King returns to earth in all his power and glory to gather his peoplejudge the living and the dead, and usher in a new Creation, a new Paradise, a new Kingdom, where we will worship and enjoy Him forever.

In the end, Jesus wins.

This is God’s epic story.

This is what we believe!

——————————————————————————————————————————

At Project Church, we also value the ancient roots of our faith as found in the orthodox creeds.

Nicene Creed

We believe in one God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and of all things visible and invisible.

And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten Son of God, begotten of the Father before all worlds, God of God, Light of Light, Very God of Very God, begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father by whom all things were made; who for us men, and for our salvation, came down from heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Spirit of the Virgin Mary, and was made man, and was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate. He suffered and was buried, and the third day he rose again according to the Scriptures, and ascended into heaven, and sits on the right hand of the Father. And he shall come again with glory to judge both the quick and the dead, whose kingdom shall have no end.

And we believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord and Giver of Life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son, who with the Father and the Son together is worshiped and glorified, who spoke by the prophets. And we believe one holy catholic [universal] and apostolic Church. We acknowledge one baptism for the remission of sins. And we look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come.

Amen.

The Apostles’ Creed

I believe in God, the Father almighty, creator of heaven and earth.
I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord.
He was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary.

He suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, died, and was buried.
He descended to the dead.
On the third day he rose again.
He ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again to judge the living and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic [universal] Church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting.

Amen.

The Wonder of Wonder

G.K. Chesterton in his classic, Orthodoxy, on his (and our) innate wonder.

These are my ultimate attitudes towards life; the soils for the seeds of doctrine. These in some dark way I thought before I could write, and felt before I could think…I will roughly recapitulate them now.

I felt in my bones; first, that this world does not explain itself. It may be a miracle with a supernatural explanation; it may be a conjuring trick, with a natural explanation. But the explanation of the conjuring trick, if it is to satisfy me, will have to be better than the natural explanations I have heard. The thing is magic, true or false.

Second, I came to feel as if magic must have a meaning, and meaning must have some one to mean it. There was something personal in the world, as in a work of art; whatever it meant it meant violently.

Third, I thought this purpose beautiful in its old design, in spite of its defects, such as dragons.

Fourth, that the proper form of thanks to it is some form of humility and restraint: we should thank God for beer and Burgundy by not drinking too much of them. We owed, also, an obedience to whatever made us.

And last, and strangest, there had come into my mind a vague and vast impression that in some way all good was a remnant to be stored and held sacred out of some primordial ruin. Man had saved his good as Crusoe saved his goods: he had saved them from a wreck.

All this I felt and the age gave me no encouragement to feel it. And all this time I had not even thought of Christian theology.

In the End

This week I shared a message at Project Church on Matthew 24-25 simply titled, “In the End.”

It’s part of our study of Matthew we call, “The Jesus Sessions.”

You can listen to audio here.

Teaching on the end times can get pretty hairy and often goofy.

But we primarily let Jesus speak for himself in this passage with some thoughts sprinkled in.

Here are some key points from the message:

Jesus wasn’t trying to make us obsessed with the end because he is the end.

He doesn’t want us to try to look out for the anti-Christ, but to look to him as Christ.

What’s he wants us to remember is this: To live like today was your last day and to live it for him.

The Kingdom of Heaven is the true promised land and we are but former slaves turned pilgrims on a voyage there.

Now we’re discovering that Jesus doesn’t just want us to get to the promised land, he’s saying the voyage matters and wants us to tell his story and change stories on our way to the King.

Jesus is the sign of the end of the age, making possible for us to live a life like Jesus did.

To love the loveless, to preach the Gospel and be good news, to feed the hungry, to care for the sick, to comfort the comfortless, to welcome strangers, to visit the hurting, and be willing to suffer for the cause of Christ.

Many people will prey on the deep longing in all humans- for things to be made right. Because right now, everything seems in shambles.

Christians should not be about predicting the unpredictable.

By doing so, we are trying to be God because Jesus tells us only he knows when Jesus will return.

We must learn to live while we wait.

The sign of the times is that you have the time to be like Christ.

2009 Reading List

Changing my reading pattern up for this year.  Usually I read whatever catches my eye but this year I’m creating an intentional reading plan designed to help grow me in specific areas.

There are bound to be exceptions throughout the year, but this pretty much tells the story of the knowledge that will be dropped in my mind. There are even a few re-reads. Look it over and let me know any books on this list that you’ve read and what you liked/disliked about them.  Thanks.

Leadership/Influence
Spiritual Leadership – J. Oswald Sanders
Tribes- Seth Godin
Outliers – Malcolm Gladwell
Culture Making – Andy Crouch
Starfish and the Spider -Ori Brafman and Rod A. Beckstrom
The Monkey and the Fish – Dave Gibbons
Axiom – Bill Hybels
Next Generation Leader – Andy Stanley
Lectures to My Students – Charles Spurgeon
Killing Cockroaches – Tony Morgan

Theology (various flavors)
Finally Alive – John Piper
ReJesus – Michael Frost and Alan Hirsch
Knowing God – JI Packer
Prodigal God – Tim Keller
Death by Love – Mark Driscoll
Orthodoxy- GK Chesterton
Surprised by Hope – NT Wright
The Cross of Christ – John Stott
Divine Conspiracy – Dallas Willard
Fifty Reasons Why Jesus Came to Die – John Piper
The Sovereignty of God – A.W. Pink
The Cost of Discipleship – Dietrich Bonhoeffer
The Great Divorce – C.S. Lewis
Screwtape Letters – C.S. Lewis

Church/Mission
Vintage Church – Mark Driscoll
Sticky Church – Larry Osborne
Total Church – Tim Chester and Steve Timmis
Church Unique – Will Mancini
Missional Renaissance – Reggie McNeal
Deliberate Simplicity – Dave Browning
The Shaping of Things to Come – Michael Frost and Alan Hirsch

Biography
A Short Life of Jonathon Edwards – George Marsden
Here I Stand: A Life of Martin Luther – Roland H. Bainton

Relationships
Celebration of Sex by Douglas E. Rosenau
Intimacy Ignited by by Joseph C. Dillow, Linda Dillow, Peter Pintus, and Lorraine Pintus
Shepherding a Child’s Heart – Tedd Tripp
War of Words – Paul Tripp

Communication/Teaching/Preaching
Supremacy of Christ in Preaching – John Piper
The Revolutionary Communicator – Erik Lokkesmoe and Jedd Medefind
Slide:ology – Nancy Duarte

Personal Growth/Life Skillz
Mad Church Disease – Anne Jackson
I Was Broke. Now I’m Not – Joe Sangl
How People Change – Paul Tripp and Timothy Lane
Humility – CJ Mahaney and Joshua Harris
On Writing – Stephen King
Killing Cockroaches – Tony Morgan

Study/Commentaries
Matthew, Mark, Luke (The Expositor’s Bible Commentary) – DA Carson, et al
Matthew: The MacArthur New Testament Commentary (4 volumes) – John MacArthur
Matthew (Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible) – Stanley Hauerwas
Mormonism Explained – Andrew Jackson

P.S. You can always view my Amazon.com wishlist if you want to hook me up with a book from this list.

God’s Epic Story

This epic is revealed within the grand narrative of Scripture in a collection of 66 books known as the Bible. Inspired by God yet written by human hands, the infallible words of Scripture are God-breathed, without error, and are the supreme and final authority for life and faith.

In eternity, this story was formedIt begins with the Author and Creator of all things- the one, true, sovereign God. He exists in community with Himself as Father, Son, and Spirit yet remains one God. He is altogether good, holy, just, wise, powerful, and loving.

In love, the Author created a world of wonder, beauty, and harmony for his masterpiece creation, humanity. Created in His image, human beings walked in relationship with the Creator and enjoyed the paradise of His creation. This is the beginning.  All was as it should be.

Then the story took a dramatic turn. Something had gone terribly wrong.

Sin entered the story through the deception of an evil serpent and the rebellion of humanity. Creation had fallen, paradise was lost, and separation came between humanity’s relationship with God and each other. Life was broken and nothing was as it should be. In the darkest moment in human history, sin bled into the story resulting in shame, suffering, pain, distrust, despair, and pride. Although still bearing the image of God, all of humanity would now live in a fallen state of sin unable to rescue ourselves.

In the midst of this horrific event, hope and restoration is promised by God as He reveals the climax of His story. God would become a man with a mission to rescue his beloved creation and crush the evil serpent. God would write clues of His arrival into the story through various messengers, laws, events, and promises. All of which would be fulfilled through the hero of God’s epic- Jesus Christ.

Jesus entered human history miraculously as he was conceived by the Spirit of God and born to a virgin mother. Fully God yet fully human, he did what humanity could not do. Jesus lived a perfect, sinless life teaching us to love God and others as ourselves. But it was his exclusive claim to being the only way to God, as well as his claim of being God, that led to his arrest, torture, and execution on a Roman cross.

He would show his great love for us through his willful yet excruciating sacrifice on the cross.  There is no greater love.

It is on the cross where the hero redeemed and rescued his beloved creation.
It is on the cross where the hero became our sin, enduring the just wrath of God.
It is on the cross where the hero became our substitute and paid the penalty for our sins.
It is on the cross where those who believe in him have right standing before God.
It is on the cross where we are cleansed from the curse of sin- past, present, and future.
It is on the finished work of the cross where Jesus died for us so that we might live for him.

But the story doesn’t end there…He came back!

Three days after being buried in a tomb, he rose from death defeating hell, conquering sin, and crushing the sting of death. He appeared to hundreds of witnesses and then physically ascended into Heaven and is presently seated at the right hand of God the FatherSalvation is only found by God’s saving grace in the person and work of Jesus ChristGod’s grace is not earned, it is freely given to all who truly believe. Those who believe will spend a life and eternity in relationship with Him. Those who don’t, get exactly what they want, a life and eternity apart from a relationship with God.

The story continues to be written through the person and work of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit of God was promised by Jesus to supernaturally guide our stories, work in the hearts of humanity, and draw us near to Jesus. The Spirit resides within us and works to teach and transform ushelp us when we are in need, convict us of our sin, secure our salvation, and empower us with spiritual gifts to advance the Kingdom of God on earth today.

The mission of Jesus was, and is, crystal clear: to seek and save that which was lost.  And that’s exactly what He did…and what He’s doing.

Through the Church, followers of Jesus are united as one body made up of various expressions of churchThey gather in prayer, worship, teaching, community, and service with baptism and the Lord’s supper being visible expression of the gospel story. The mission of the Church is to be a worldwide movement that advances the Kingdom of God and proclaims the story of God’s amazing grace, the gospel of Jesus Christ, to the ends of the earth- starting in our local communities.

Today, Jesus Christ reigns supreme as King of kings and Lord of lords. This epic will end when the King returns to earth in all his power and glory to gather his people, judge the living and the dead, and usher in a new Creation, a new Paradise, a new Kingdom, where we will worship and enjoy Him forever.

In the end, Jesus wins.

This is God’s story.

This is what we believe.