Thursday, January 31, 2008

A Day in the Life of a Humble Calvinist

The article/blog below is from a blog called "Humble Calvinism." Hope you enjoy:


Calvinism is big. It’s a worldview that embraces God’s sovereignty over every event in world history. God is over the shifting of political powers, the immigration of people, the establishment of cultures, natural calamities, and even down to the fact that you are reading this right now. By nature, Calvinism is concerned with everything because God is concerned with everything. So how can we allow the biblical theology of Calvinism and the Cross to penetrate our daily living so that dry, stoic, intellectual Calvinism becomes living and breathing Humble Calvinism?

Well, one of my dear friends has helped me see what this looks like. Tom Fluharty is an tomflu.gifincredible artist. His talents are phenomenal. But even more phenomenal is God’s grace that allows him to focus his mind, will and affections on Gospel in his daily devotional times. I get to read some of these journal articles that he sends my way on occasion. I wanted to share a recent journal entry.

We’ve been talking recently about God’s abduction. Sinners like us don’t want God. We all naturally turn away from Him, fail to do anything to glorify Him, and thus we all become worthless to Him (Rom. 3:12). God must abduct us! He must chose for us something better than we’ve chosen for ourselves. This thought caught the attention and affections of Tom in his recent journal entry. This is what he wrote,

Kidnapped 1.20.07

I was abducted, snatched from a street corner one drunken Summer night. Snatched from the kingdom of darkness and immediately translated to the kingdom of the Most High King. A radical abduction that instantly changes or transforms the heart. Rather it’s a heartabducted.jpg transplant by the great heavenly heart surgeon. Won over not wooed. Not an invitation, an abduction. Life came down on 8th st 5th Ave N.Y.C. The glory of God came to Greenwich Village to fill a wretched man, turning him into a lover of God. Deal no more with unreality. You poor soul wallowing in unfulfilling lust and drunkenness. Glory has comes. I have seen a great light. I have beheld His glory. Thank you Lord. I am now the temple of the radical living God. Thank you Lord for the past 22 1/2 years!

“Won over not wooed. Not an invitation, an abduction.” That thought flows from a radical, Humble Calvinism. Tom encourages me through his example. Our communion with God should be saturated with the Cross, saturated with an awareness of our depravity, the personal election of God, God’s strength to uphold us and the glory of God’s sovereign majesty! This is a reminder that Humble Calvinism should transform every area of my life, and even show itself in my journal entries. We build off theology. But let’s not stop by saying “Isn’t it amazing that God elects sinners?” Let’s move beyond this and say, “Isn’t it amazing that God elected such a sinner as I when I was … ?” Humble Calvinism must penetrate our hearts and reveal itself in how we worship the Sovereign Lord and this will show itself in our daily journals.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Music that speaks to the soul and the EAR!

Recently, a grassroots movement has taken place in reformed music. More and more churches have found great talent inside their congregations that give birth to new (from old... I'll explain) & fresh godly music. By searching the writings of the giants of the faith they have discovered that simple and profound statements can be used to worship our Lord. Most of these tunes are ripped from the pages of old hymn books. You may remember a blog a few days ago about young people searching for songs that have meaning, theology, and worth. I am one of those "young" people... although I am not so sure the youth of SMPCA would categorize me as "young."
This movement has really taken shape as more and more churches are following the pattern of these musicians. They have gone into prayer books (Valley of Vision), lost hymnbooks (The Gasby Project), and well known hymns (Beneath the Cross of Jesus) and added new tunes while maintaining the rich lyrics. In the past couple years, I have fell in love with this genre. And so I encourage you to dive right in and see the depths of godly worship that can be had by the believers of Christ.
I have put together some of the music that you may want to consider getting. Below are some links that you can go and listen. Hope you enjoy!

Valley of Vision: you may remember at each communion service we read from this book. (In Feb. they are selling each CD for $6!)
http://www.sovereigngraceministries.org/Resources/Music/ValleyOfVision.aspx

This is a free download of one song.
http://www.sovereigngracestore.com/ProductInfo.aspx?productid=M4220-07-51

These are by far the best in my option. Their latest iGrace V "Wake Thy Slumbering Children" is their best one yet!
http://www.igracemusic.com/music/index.htm

This is a church outside Birmingham, AL. They produce their own music from old hymnbooks they recover. I have a few of their CD's and recommend them highly.
http://www.redmountainchurch.org/rmm/alb/albums.html

There are plenty more out there that I have yet to discover, but this should get you started. Hope you find them as nourishing to the soul as I have.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Liberation Free Will: what are we really praying for?

Excerpt from John Feinberg, No One Like Him: The Doctrine of God, Foundations of Evangelical Theology, pp. 705-706.

If I [believe in libertarian freedom and] plead with God to remove my friend’s illness, that is not absurd, for God can answer that prayer without negating anyone’s freedom. But what about the request that God change the attitudes and actions of my friend’s tyrannical boss? What about petitions that ask God to move those processing applications for graduate school to accept my friend? Or what about prayers that ask God to keep my enemies at work from bothering me? And what about pleading with God to save a dear relative or friend? In all of these cases, what am I asking God to do, if libertarian free will obtains? I am either asking God to override others’ freedom, or I am asking him to move them to do something freely in spite of the fact that my belief in libertarian free will means that I believe Gold cannot get anybody to do anything freely. If I truly value libertarian free will as much as libertarians say they do, why would I ask God to override it just because of my petition? . . . Libertarians may be asking God to try to persuade their friends, but I repeat that God can only guarantee their persuasion by casual determinism, and that abridges libertarian free will.

On the other hand, if I am not asking God to override someone else’s freedom, then I’m asking him to do something which I believe he cannot do (make it the case that someone else does something freely). I may ask him to try to persuade the person, but I know that without God overriding their freedom, he cannot guarantee that they will change. In fact, since at the moment of free decision making nothing decisively inclines their will, regardless of what God or anyone else does or says, the matter may be hopeless. In light of such problems with interceding with God to change someone’s incompatibilistically free actions or attitudes, there is good reason for anyone committed to libertarian free will who understands the implications of the position to think twice before offering intercessory prayers of the kind mentioned. In fact, prayer to change either our or others’ actions seems problematic.

With libertarian free will many prayers make no sense. . . . …Consider petitions about ourselves that do involve our free will. Suppose we ask the Lord to help us be more faithful in Bible reading, prayer, and witnessing. Or suppose we pray that the Lord will help us treat our family or neighbor better. I maintain that if libertarian free will obtains in our world, these are to a large degree absurd requests. For what are we asking God to do? In order for me to be more faithful in Bible reading, prayer, and witnessing, won’t I have to decide to do these things? But if I have libertarian free will and am allowed to exercise it, how can God fulfill my request? If he doesn’t override my libertarian freedom, he cannot guarantee the fulfillment of my request. So what am I asking him to do? Override my freedom? Make it the case that I freely decide to do these things? But here libertarians tell us that, if God brings it about that we do anything, we don’t do it freely. It seems that God cannot be certain to grant my request unless he overrides my freedom, but why would God want me to engage in these spiritual exercises because I’m forced to do so (according to my libertarian free will, I would be forced, but God wants my love and devotion freely!)? Shouldn’t I, then, petition myself in an attempt to convince myself to do these things? After all, only I can freely effect what I choose to do, given libertarian free will. But if I did petition myself, wouldn’t that usually mean I had already decided to do these things, and if so, the petition becomes unnecessary? I submit, then, that unless I really want God to override my freedom, what I ask him in these cases is absurd. If he doesn’t tamper with my libertarian free will, he can’t do what I ask; only I can, but petitioning myself engages me in the further absurdities mentioned.

The Gospel According to Joel Osteen


We have seen many self-help books with a Bible twist hit the bookstores (The Prayer of Jabez, The Power of Positive Thinking, 7 things that steal your joy by Joyce Meyers, and countless others) but it seems that Joel Osteen has come onto the scene unlike anyone else. He speaks of how to improve your life based on what you have inside of you. He is a very likable guy with a nice smile and speaks great motivational words on your life. All the while sprinkling a Bible verse here and there to convince you that the Bible really teaches his "happy-life" doctrine.
"Become a better you: 7 keys to improving your life every day" has successfully labeled itself as a Christian book in the eyes of bookstores. Joel Osteen has also successfully convinced (sadly) that he and his building of people are a church. Despite the absence of Jesus Christ and the blood of Calvary, the atonement, the nature of sin and condemnation, a holy God and unholy mankind, and the gospel of law & grace, Joel Osteen has been labeled an Evangelical Christian preacher.
I have said this many times before, if Joel Osteen would simply call himself a motivational speaker and NOT a preacher of the gospel he would not be considered a leading heretic in our culture. Just because there's a bible verse from time to time, calls his building a place of worship, and happen to meet on Sunday morning, doesn't make it a church anymore than you standing in a garage makes you a car.
But sadly, American Christianity allows a man like this to be labeled in the camp of believers. Joel Osteen asks this question in his book:
"What must you do to become a better you? I am hoping to help you look inside yourself and discover the priceless seeds of greatness that God has placed within you." According to Osteen, you have whatever it takes to be a better you by simply looking inside. God is a grandfather that will give you whatever you want as long as you follow a few simple steps.
In the link below you will find an audio discussion about this book. Michael Horton is a professor at Westminster Seminary (and a guest professor at RTS). You can download this for free or just listen on your computer. If you would like to listen simply click the title of this blog above. I highly encourage you to listen to this broadcast. I don't think there is any question that you will be shocked at what this man is teaching.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

My Grandmother Saved It, My Mother Threw It Away, and Now I’m Buying It Back: Why Young People Are Returning to Old Hymn Texts

Article by Kevin Twit:

Not too long ago I saw a sign in an antique store: "My grandmother saved it, my mother threw it away, and now I’m buying it back!" That little sign captures the story of church music in the last fifty years. In my work as a pastor with college students, I have been taking note of what feels like the beginning of a movement.

There is most definitely a hunger and longing among the emerging generations, college students and twenty-somethings, to connect with something real and solid rather than the faddish and ephemeral. Books like Robert Webber’s The Younger Evangelicals (Baker, 2002) and Colleen Carroll’s The New Faithful (Loyola Press, 2002) well document this phenomenon. Recently a college student posted this letter on a website in response to an article on hymns.

"Coming from a typical praise chorusreliant high school youth group . . .I didn’t understand a lot of the poetic and imagery-driven lyrics, and the word hymn automatically meant boring music. But I found myself falling in love with the old hymns. . . . The words are so profound and full of truth one can’t help but be broken. Singing hymns has seriously changed my life and freed me from feeling frustrated by surface lyrics that focus on how I feel about God, which is always changing. Hymns have allowed me to center my worship on the Gospel, which in turn compels me to love the God I am prone to hate and wander from."

What thrills me is to see how her discovery of hymns has affected even the way she expresses what she finds in her heart—"Come Thou Fount" has helped orient her to a richer view of what the Christian life actually feels like! For many, the church’s hymn tradition has become a treasured resource; students around the country are scouting out used bookstores for antique hymnals, searching for gems that have fallen out of use and yet resonate with their faith and longing to connect with God in a deeper way. Across the country there’s been an explosion of interest in writing new tunes for old hymns. Grassroots-produced CDs like Indelible Grace (see RW 66, p. 42) as well as recent projects by artists including Amy Grant (Legacy) and Caedmon’s Call (In The Company of Angels) have featured old hymns, many of them set to new tunes in keeping with the musical cultures of emerging generations.

It is worth pondering why hymns are connecting with young people. Few would have predicted this when baby boomers were throwing out anything "old-fashioned" or traditional. But we still need hymns in a postmodern world! In fact, the hymn tradition has tremendous things to offer the emerging generations—things they are really longing for and that are frequently lacking in the praise and chorus music so often marketed as "college worship." What’s going on? Why do we still need hymns in a postmodern world? Here are several reasons:

Because Worship Is Formative

Worship shapes and molds us. Our hearts are drawn from other "treasures"

as our eyes are opened to see Jesus for who he really is. Thomas Chalmers

(nineteenth-century Scottish Presbyterian), called this the "expulsive power of a new affection." In worship we seek to have Jesus become more beautiful and believable to us. Anne Steele (eighteenth century) captures this in a hymn text: "Thou lovely Source of true delight, whom I unseen adore; unveil thy beauties to my heart, that I might love thee more!" Worship restores our sanity so that we can live in line with the truth of the gospel rather than with the fantasy world in which we must earn God’s favor. Hymns are wonderful for doing this.

Because of the Longing to Experience God

Postmoderns long for experience with God, and hymns are some of the richest expression of Christian experience we have. They are a doorway into sensing the truth in our hearts rather than just "knowing" it in our heads. Wesley’s text "Arise, my soul, arise, shake off thy guilty fears; the bleeding sacrifice on my behalf appears" is a great example of crying out to God to sense what we confess.

Because Hymns Help Us Grow Up

Hymns teach us the rich theology we really need. If we have a limited view of who God is and what the gospel is, our experience of it will be limited as well. Paul writes the longest explanation of the gospel to people who are (literally) world-famous for their faith (Rom. 1:8) because, as Luther said, we leak the gospel and it needs to be beat into our heads over and over again! Hymns really stretch us. Why is Henry Lyte’s "Jesus, I My Cross Have Taken" one of my students’ favorite hymns? Probably because it offers us orientation to what the Christian life is really all about and doesn’t sugarcoat the gospel at all:

Jesus, I my cross have taken,

all to leave and follow thee.

Destitute, despised, forsaken,

thou from hence my all shall be.

Perish every fond ambition,

all I’ve sought or hoped or known.

Yet how rich is my condition!

God and heaven are still my own.

Let the world despise and leave me;

they have left my Savior too.

Human hearts and looks deceive me;

thou art not, like them, untrue.

O while thou dost smile upon me,

God of wisdom, love, and might,

foes may hate and friends disown me,

show thy face and all is bright.

Because Hymns Are Mini-meditations on the "Paradoxes" of the Gospel That Drive Us to Worship

C. H. Spurgeon said, "When I cannot understand anything in the Bible, it seems as though God had set a chair there for me, at which to kneel and worship; and that the mysteries are intended to be an altar of devotion." Hymns are an opportunity to sit in a mystery—like Charles Wesley’s "And can it be that thou my God shouldst die for me?"—until it begins to melt our hearts.

Because Hymns Can Teach Us the Art of Meditation on Scripture

This is an art we desperately need to relearn. Hymns help us take a theme and turn it over; they let us gaze on it from different angles. And they suggest (though by no means do they ever exhaust) ways in which this truth should change our lives. In this way they model how to meditate upon Scripture and the truths of the gospel.

Because Hymns Remind Us That We Can Only Approach God Through the Blood of Jesus (1 Pet. 2:5)

The idea that we only approach God as Christians through the blood of Christ is too rarely mentioned in most modern choruses. We need deeper, richer, and longer looks at the cross and all that it means. As Luther advised, "For every one look you take at your sin, take ten looks at the cross!"

Because Hymns Focus Us on God’s Promises More Than on Ours

We grow by feeding on God’s character revealed and by feasting on God’s promises. We need to recall Augustus Toplady’s hymn "Rock of Ages" (originally titled "A living and dying prayer for the holiest believer on earth"; see p. 25): "Could my zeal no respite know, could my tears forever flow, all for sin could not atone, thou must save and thou alone!"

Here is another set of reasons to sing hymns rather than only choruses:

• Hymns offer a fuller emotional range of expression. Hymns help us work through emotions and they cover a wider range of emotions than many modern choruses do. Although we may associate hymns with a lack of emotion and modern choruses with emotional excess at times, careful study reveals that the emotional range touched on by modern choruses is rather narrow.

• Hymns tend to engage our imagination, intellect, and will together. Good hymns give us rich language and images that require us to think and imagine as the way to stir the passions. While praise choruses do use imagery, they sometimes get stuck in clichés that no longer engage our imaginations. The Scriptures are full of diverse images; our songs should reflect this creativity too.

• Hymns tell a story and walk us through the gospel. Some choruses are often more like "images" that flash on the television screen for a moment. They stir us, but they don’t take us anywhere. In a good hymn, the writer offers her story and invites you to try it on and see if it might be your story too.

• Hymns remind us that the church is bigger than the people we know, or even those who are alive today. Through hymns we connect with believers who lived centuries before us. We can have "mystic sweet communion, with those whose rest is won" ("The Church’s One Foundation" by Stone). When I introduce people to Anne Steele’s hymns, they are struck by the powerful way she dealt with her immense suffering. They find that her cries can become their cries, her tears can elicit their tears, and her faith can encourage their faith. Seeing that we can connect with an English woman who lived in a small village 300 years ago and feel what she felt is powerful. All of the sudden the kingdom of God looks much bigger!

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

A Savior on Capital Hill?

Ahh the political season is NOW! We are in the midst of all the drama, the rhetoric, the spin, the promises, the faults of each candidate, and the hopes and dreams of what will be. I admit, I get excited about the future of our country. I admit, I have ideas of what a candidate should represent. I admit, I have a soap box that I want a candidate to stand on with me. I admit, I have visions of new beginnings! But what I need to remember is that the candidate who will be placing their hand on that sacred Bible on Inauguration Day will NOT be the one who wrote IT! He/she will NOT be able to convict the world of sin and righteousness, nor will he/she be able to atone for the corruption that is on capital hill... and especially my own heart.
And neither will the next president do this for you! But I am afraid we believe that the President of the United States has the ability to bring the Kingdom of Christ to completion. We think in our hearts, "If only the next president will overturn Roe Vs. Wade!" or "If only the next president will be a true Christian!" or "If only a democrat does not get into the oval office!" THEN our country will be saved.
This is wishful thinking I'm afraid. We will NEVER have a Savior on Capital Hill. Just think back to the disciples. They wanted a Capital Hill Savior too. But Christ said very clearly (& publicly I might add) , "My kingdom is not of this world" John 18:36. Likewise the kingdom is not the USA. Nor should we expect it to be.
Does this mean that we should distance ourselves from the issues? Should we cease from voicing our views on politics? Should we just forget politics all together? I am pretty sure the answer is no. These issues are very important. These issues do affect us and they will impact your life. What I think we should do is have a little perspective. Know that the next President will not fulfill the Kingdom of ________ <-- your name here. But rather the next President needs a Savior too. The next President will let you down. The next President will not bring your dreams to fruition. Only Christ can bring this about.
So watch the debates, read about the candidates and their positions, research their voting records, and be involved, but know that the candidate you support will never be the Savior on Capital Hill.

Below are lyrics from a Christian artist about this very thing.

I’m so tired of these mortal men
with their hands on their wallets and their hearts full of sin
scared of their enemies, scared of their friends
and always running for re-election
so come to DC if it be thy will
because we’ve never had a savior on Capitol Hill

you can always trust the devil or a politician
to be the devil or a politician
but beyond that friends you’d best beware
‘cause at the Pentagon bar they’re an inseparable pair
and as long as the lobbyists are paying their bills
we’ll never have a savior on Capitol Hill

all of our problems gonna disappear
when we can whisper right in that President’s ear
he could walk right across the reflection pool
in his combat boots and ten thousand dollar suit

you can render unto Caesar everything that’s his
you can trust in his power to come to your defense
it’s the way of the world, the way of the gun
it’s the trading of an evil for a lesser one
so don’t hold your breath or your vote until
you think you’ve finally found a savior up on Capitol Hill

Derek Webb

Friday, January 11, 2008

Charles Spurgeon "The Prince of Preachers"

Below is a devotional that Charles Spurgeon did on Christ praying for us. Notice that Spurgeon is trying to get you to understand that Christ is actively praying for us... EVEN RIGHT NOW! for you. Hope this encourages you today.

"I have prayed for thee."—Luke 22:32

How encouraging is the thought of the Redeemer's never-ceasing intercession for us. When we pray, He pleads for us; and when we are not praying, He is advocating our cause, and by His supplications shielding us from unseen dangers. Notice the word of comfort addressed to Peter—"Simon, Simon, Satan has desired to have you that he may sift you as wheat; but"—what? "But go and pray for yourself." That would be good advice, but it is not so written. Neither does he say, "But I will keep you watchful, and so you shall be preserved." That were a great blessing. No, it is, "But I have prayed for thee, that your faith fail not." We little know what we owe to our Saviour's prayers. When we reach the hill-tops of heaven, and look back upon all the way where the Lord our God has led us, how we shall praise Him who, before the eternal throne, undid the mischief which Satan was doing upon earth. How shall we thank Him because He never held His peace, but day and night pointed to the wounds upon His hands, and carried our names upon His breastplate! Even before Satan had begun to tempt, Jesus had forestalled him and entered a plea in heaven. Mercy outruns malice. Mark, He does not say, "Satan has desired to have you." He checks Satan even in his very desire, and nips it in the bud. He does not say, "But I have desired to pray for you." No, but "I have prayed for you: I have done it already; I have gone to court and entered a counterplea even before an accusation is made." O Jesus, what a comfort it is that you have pleaded our cause against our unseen enemies; countermined their mines, and unmasked their ambushes. Here is a matter for joy, gratitude, hope, and confidence.
-Charles Spurgeon

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Satan in charge of a city?

"What would things look like if Satan actually took over a city? The first frames in our imaginative slide show probably depict mayhem on a massive scale: Widespread violence, deviant sexualities, pornography in every vending machine, churches closed down and worshipers dragged off to City Hall. Over a half-century ago, Donald Grey Barnhouse, pastor of Philadelphia's Tenth Presbyterian Church, gave his CBS radio audience a different picture of what it would look like if Satan took control of a town in America. He said that all of the bars and pool halls would be closed, pornography banished, pristine streets and sidewalks would be occupied by tidy pedestrians who smiled at each other. There would be no swearing. The kids would answer "Yes, sir," "No, ma'am," and the churches would be full on Sunday ... where Christ is not preached." Dr. Michael Horton
If you would like to read the rest of this article click here

Makes you think huh?

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Thanks For Coming!

Interested people welcome!

Look forward to seeing a lot of you here in the future. I believe this blog will have a plethora of new features, interesting articles, political insights, scriptural devotions, SMPCA updates/events, and much much more.

If you would like to receive an email anytime something new is added to this blog just simply add your email address in the box in the upper right hand of this page.

You will get an email confirming your request, follow the link in that email, and your set!

*If you scroll down you will see 2 articles already posted. Be sure to see the comments after the posts.

Friday, January 4, 2008

A 15 Year Old Essay

WRITTEN BY A 15 yr. old SCHOOL KID IN ARIZONA :

Since the Pledge of Allegiance
and
The Lord's Prayer
are not allowed in most
public schools anymore
Because the word 'God' is mentioned....
A kid in Arizona wrote the attached essay
NEW School prayer :
Now I sit me down in school
Where praying is against the rule
For this great nation under God
Finds mention of Him very odd.
If Scripture now the class recites,
It violates the Bill of Rights.
And anytime my head I bow
Becomes a Federal matter now.
Our hair can be purple, orange or green,
That's no offense; it's a freedom scene.
The law is specific, the law is precise.
Prayers spoken aloud are a serious vice.
For praying in a public hall
Might offend someone with no faith at all.
In silence alone we must meditate,
God's name is prohibited by the state.
We're allowed to cuss and dress like freaks,
And pierce our noses, tongues and cheeks.
They've outlawed guns, but FIRST the Bible.
To quote the Good Book makes me liable.
We can elect a pregnant Senior Queen,
And the 'unwed daddy,' our Senior King.
It's 'inappropriate' to teach right from wrong,
We're taught that such 'judgments' do not belong.
We can get our condoms and birth controls,
Study witchcraft, vampires and totem poles.
But the Ten Commandments are not allowed,
No word of God must reach this crowd.
It's scary here I must confess,
When chaos reigns the school's a mess.
So, Lord, this silent plea I make:
Should I be shot; My soul please take!
Amen


The New and Improved Blog

Our previous blog died and so I was thinking of a way to continue blogging. For whatever reason the other blog failed, we are going to try this again. Here are a few changes that may enhance the blog realm.
1. World view Blogs: From time to time I will discuss a certain topic that has come to our attention in the public eye. This is an attempt to bring a biblical worldview to the world in which we live. I will discuss things like the election and the candidates, new technologies that are shaping our fast-pace society (i.e. iPod, facebook, etc), and cultural phenomenons (Harry Potter and the like).
2. Biblical Blogs: I will take a passage and/or specific text and begin to expound on some thoughts that I have gleaned from my studies. You might say this is sort of like a devotional one would read.
3. Updates. Our "other" blog was pretty good with this. There were times when I needed to send out a message about events, opportunities to make money, prayer requests, last minute cancellations, etc. This blog will serve that same purpose.
4. Misc. The last thing is that I really don't know where this blog will take us. So this "misc." will fill that void.

I hope that you find this to be informative, interesting, and encouraging.
Aaron