The Best “Career”

Guests.  Hospital visits.  Etc.  A horrible cold last week settled in my lungs.  (Formerly a several-times-a-year occurrence, this is the first time it’s happened in more than a year!  Hooray! :))

All that is to say, life is moving faster than I am these days.  So again I’ll let someone else do the writing.  David Warner, on Kent Brandenburg’s What is Truth, on the privilege of the ministry “career”:

If any man were to think less of this master, I want him to remember that a medical doctor can save only a human body, but the career of Christ can save a human soul forever; a lawyer can change a criminal to only a prisoner, but the truth can change a criminal to a Christian; a firefighter can save a man from only a house of fire, but the truth can save a man from the fires of hell; an astronomer knows only the stars of the universe, but I know what’s beyond the universe; an archaeologist knows only the artifacts of the past, but I know the Architect of the past; and a soldier knows how to fight only a war, but I know how to fight the war that will end all wars. This is the career I am trained to do, to give man the answers he doesn’t want to hear, but the only answers that will allow him to see reality and the better meaning of his existence to God.

It’s all worth reading.

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The Money Theme in Acts

Last Sunday, I finished a series of sermons in Acts.  This was an overview series rather than a detailed verse-by-verse exposition, looking to pick up the broad themes of different sections of the book.  Sunday’s sermon was based on something I had never noticed previously — there is a reference to money on almost every page of the book of Acts.

I probably broke all rules of homiletics by bringing a sermon with 26 points (for 26 different passages).  I had a seminary professor who might not approve. 🙂

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Various Links 31 May 2013

Today, some links that have been rattling around in my notes for a while, with some quick thoughts on them.

From the Church of Scotland:  “We want to ensure we have the right people in the right places at the right time equipped to deliver God’s work and word.”

My thought:  Those who blatantly rebel against God’s Word aren’t going to be the right people….

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The Death Penalty — Redemptive Purpose

A diminished view of God’s justice inevitably impacts our love for Him. 

We come now to what I’ll call the redemptive purpose of the death penalty.  It is an often overlooked truth which should cause every Christian to support capital punishment in principle, even if we oppose unbiblical implementations.  The death penalty teaches the lost their need of the Saviour, and teaches believers the greatness of God’s mercy.

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Are “Praise Teams” Biblical?

Busy days for me, so I’ll let someone else do the writing today.  This is a thought-provoking article dealing with how Biblical worship is hindered by a praise team / praise band / group of praise leaders / (choose your own nomenclature).  He is not writing for or against any particular musical style, but rather focusing on three things, that singing be congregational, together, and enthusiastic.  He argues that the use of praise bands hinders those things.

The hesitance of the congregational singers is an unavoidable consequence of using a Praise Team rather than a printed (or otherwise displayed) musical score; and the drowning out of the congregation by the Praise Team is due also to the fact that the Praise Team functions as the musical score, albeit one that is heard and not seen. Some Praise Teams are worse than others, of course. Some introduce more variations between stanzas than others, and such variations create even more hesitance for the congregation: Will there be an instrumental bridge between the stanzas or not? Will the same harmonies be employed in each stanza, or not? Will portions of the refrain or one of the stanzas be repeated or not? The congregation does not know—indeed cannot know—how each stanza will sound until it hears it, so the congregation sings tentatively, hesitantly, and a micro-second behind the Praise Team. The Praise Team has unwittingly become like the third grade jokester who invites you to have a seat, pointing to a chair. When you go to sit down, the jokester pulls the chair away, and you land on your backside. The Praise Team does the same thing musically; the congregation never knows (indeed, it can never know) how the Team will perform each stanza until the congregation hears it. And it can only hear it if the Praise Team is amplified to the point that it effectively overpowers the congregation.

This is a long article.  But if you have an interest in thinking through the use of music in Biblical worship, you’ll need to consider what T. David Gordon has to say.

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“Sailing, Sailing….”

“…over the bounding main….”

Over the Bounding Main

Over the Bounding Main

Yesterday, friends took us sailing, something we’d never done before.

Group Bridge

Approaching the Forth Train Bridge

What a bunch of beautiful ladies and handsome guys, right?  Anyway, this is proof that we really did do this.

Interesting that despite there being two wheels, no one has a hand on either in this picture (those are rails we are holding).  Clearly, somebody did something right, because despite that, I’m here writing this post.

Two Wheels

We learned why the boat has two wheels.  In high winds, the boat tips way over, maybe beyond 45 degrees.  (I am reliably informed this will not capsize this kind of boat, which I believe, because it didn’t yesterday.)  When it tips to port, if you are on the port side, the sails are in your line of sight, so you move to the wheel on the starboard side.

How do I know this is true?

39 Knots

39 Knots

39 knots.  We knew we had wind gusts in the mid-30s, but a video caught a momentary reading of 39.0.  It was NOT supposed to be that windy, but it certainly made it interesting!

On the way home over the Forth Road Bridge, they had reduced the speed limit to 40 mph because of high winds.  And we’d been in that in a sail boat.

“Peaceful!”

Colin (Edinburgh Boat Charters) talks about “sailing experience” in his literature, but I loved his brochure that says ” the venue is peaceful and inspirational.”  Inspirational certainly, exhilarating, but when the windows of the cabin are looking into the water instead of over it, I wouldn’t say “peaceful!”

I don’t think Colin can order up 39 knot winds on demand, so don’t call him expecting an experience quite like ours.  I don’t know if he would even take novices out if the forecast had been for gusts that high.  But I never felt unsafe or as if he didn’t have the whole thing under control (except when he let me take the wheel, but that’s another story).

It does give me a greater respect for the sea, and a little better appreciation for the references to sailing in the Scripture.  Coming back under the bridges, when the wind had really kicked up, and then into port, Colin brought the sails down and used the engine.  That wasn’t an option in Biblical times.  I just preached on Acts 27, which talks about them trying to bring the ship into some kind of harbour on Malta.  I have a little more understanding of just how hard it could be to direct a ship in conditions far worse than we had yesterday.

Steering a Straight Course

That first picture above shows our course.  It’s hard to see because I reduced the size to make WordPress happy, but there is a straight line between the red dots.  It shows our outward (eastward) course under the bridges (the southern dots), and then the return to the north.  The longest straight red line is on the outward journey, from east of the train bridge to south of Dalgety Bay.

I was on the wheel for that long straight stretch.  Which proves I was the best at holding a straight course, right?  I’ve got a picture to prove it, after all.

Pictures are always reliable.  Especially those you see on the Internet.

Oh, and no matter what others may say, never believe that jibe was accidental, either.  I was teaching people to watch their heads when the boom swings.  My son was being all too casual, and this was my chance to get his attention.  When kids are grown up, parents have to get creative. 🙂 Unannounced jibes may have their uses!

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Satan’s Job

Don’t beat yourself up for past sins.  That’s Satan’s job.

I John 1:9

If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.

Revelation 12:9-10

9 And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.
10 And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them before our God day and night.

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