Read the Bible!
Bible reading plans from The Gospel Coalition in various formats including RSS, mobile & ical (whatever that is!).
I like the look of Stephen Witmer's plan because it covers both OT & NT in 2 years with oh so realistic 'catch up days'! (much better than trying to read both OT & NT in 1 year because you're more likely to have time to reflect on what you've read).
Thoughts from an ordinary vicar who's just trying to proclaim Christ in an increasingly hostile world.
Tuesday 27 December 2011
Wednesday 21 December 2011
Luke 1. 1-5
This is a bit of a trial. Here's a re-recording of a sermon on Luke 1:1-5 and 1 John 1. Unfortaunately, I've not been able to configure an audio player within Blogger yet (if anyone can help...), so you'll need to download the file and then play it with any audio player.
Because I re-recorded it at home, it doesn't have the same feel as a 'live' sermon and the quality of the audio isn't great, but I've heard worse!
Luke 1.1-5.wma
Saturday 17 December 2011
Books to give away
People often ask me if I can recommend a book for a friend who is asking about Christianity. Here are a few suggestions - if you have other suggestions, please add a comment.
The most important thing is to get people reading the Bible itself. But to give someone the complete
book can be very daunting. So why not give a New Testament or an individual gospel?
You can buy an ESV NT for just £1.50 or the NIV for £2.99
Individual gospels are available singly or in packs of 20 if you've got lots of friends!
If you decided to give away Mark's gospel, a good companion would be Tim Keller's King's Cross which explains the message of Mark.
The God Who Is There, "In this basic introduction to faith, D. A. Carson takes seekers, and new Christians ... through the big story of Scripture. He helps readers to know what they believe and why they believe it."
The book is based on a series of talks which can be seen & heard on the Gospel Coalition website, or on Vimeo.
John Stott's Basic Christianity was first published over 50 years ago, but is still one of the best explanations of the Christian message. It's a book for the keener reader.
Perhaps an easier book to read is John Chapman's A Fresh Start
Of course the old classic is C S Lewis, Mere Christianity. The book is not without its faults (e.g. Lewis was a 'high-churchman' and at times the book is rather 'religious'), but for a Lewis fan, this is a great gift.
Tim Keller has written some fantastic books, and The Prodigal God, is a brilliant, very readable explanation of the grace of God from the parable of the lost son in Luke 15.
Over to you - add more titles... (as editor, I always reserve the right to edit!).
The most important thing is to get people reading the Bible itself. But to give someone the complete
book can be very daunting. So why not give a New Testament or an individual gospel?
You can buy an ESV NT for just £1.50 or the NIV for £2.99
Individual gospels are available singly or in packs of 20 if you've got lots of friends!
If you decided to give away Mark's gospel, a good companion would be Tim Keller's King's Cross which explains the message of Mark.
The God Who Is There, "In this basic introduction to faith, D. A. Carson takes seekers, and new Christians ... through the big story of Scripture. He helps readers to know what they believe and why they believe it."
The book is based on a series of talks which can be seen & heard on the Gospel Coalition website, or on Vimeo.
John Stott's Basic Christianity was first published over 50 years ago, but is still one of the best explanations of the Christian message. It's a book for the keener reader.
Perhaps an easier book to read is John Chapman's A Fresh Start
Of course the old classic is C S Lewis, Mere Christianity. The book is not without its faults (e.g. Lewis was a 'high-churchman' and at times the book is rather 'religious'), but for a Lewis fan, this is a great gift.
Tim Keller has written some fantastic books, and The Prodigal God, is a brilliant, very readable explanation of the grace of God from the parable of the lost son in Luke 15.
Over to you - add more titles... (as editor, I always reserve the right to edit!).
Friday 16 December 2011
Open the Bible
Has your Bible reading dropped off the radar?
Has your Bible reading ever really got going?
Have a look here and be encouraged!
Has your Bible reading ever really got going?
Have a look here and be encouraged!
Sunday 11 December 2011
A sure and certain faith
Luke 1:1-5
& 1 John 1:1-10
For
many
people,
'faith'
is a
belief
that's
not
based
on
evidence -
a
leap
in
the
dark.
And
the BBC with its beloved atheists like Sir David Attenborough,
Richard Dawkins and Brian Cox, is doing a brilliant job of persuading
vast numbers of people that to believe in God is a stupid, ignorant,
superstitious thing to do.
To
these lovely, kind, tolerant rationalists, Christians are... well, let
me read to you from the introduction to the 'new atheist' website.
“Tolerance
of pervasive myth and superstition in modern society is not a
virtue.
Religious fundamentalism has gone main stream and its toll on education, science, and social progress is disheartening.
Wake up people!! We are smart enough now to kill our invisible gods and oppressive beliefs.
It is the responsibility of the educated to educate the uneducated, lest we fall prey to the tyranny of ignorance.”
Religious fundamentalism has gone main stream and its toll on education, science, and social progress is disheartening.
Wake up people!! We are smart enough now to kill our invisible gods and oppressive beliefs.
It is the responsibility of the educated to educate the uneducated, lest we fall prey to the tyranny of ignorance.”
What
I want to do this morning is to say that we Christians need to 'Wake
up!' and get smart about the true nature of our belief so that we can
resist the attacks from the aggressive, pervasive and truly
intolerant fundamentalism of this new religion called atheism.
And
first of all we need to realise that Christian faith is not based on
superstition or myth. It is not a leap in the dark.
It
is based on sound evidence coming from many sources – history,
rational explanation of the world we live in and experience, science
and nature.
So
what
evidence do
we
need
to
believe
something
is
true?
The
atheists seem to think that evidence only comes from their
microscopes, telescopes, scanners and hadron colliders.
But
there are many valid forms of evidence – and each form of evidence
is suitable in its own sphere of knowledge & belief.
So,
yes, if you want to discover a new planet 600 light years away, then
you need NASA's Kepler space telescope.
And
if you want to discover something new about particle physics you may
need a large hadron collider.
But
neither of them were any use whatsoever to us 12 members of the jury
at Maidstone Crown Court when we were deliberating on a rape case in
which there was no forensic evidence.
We
had to rely on the evidence of witnesses. And on that basis we made a
reasoned decision.
And
this
has been happening
up
and
down
the
country
this
week,
and
everyone
accepts
that
on the basis of eyewitness evidence, you
can
come
to
a
decision
'beyond
reasonable
doubt'.
Is
that a 'leap in the dark'? Is that an irrational belief? Absolutely
not.
Now
tell me, would you believe me if I told you that in August 1875, a
man called Matthew Webb covered his body in porpoise grease and,
fortified by cod liver oil, beef tea, brandy, coffee and strong old
ale, became the first person to swim the English Channel?
You
may doubt my knowledge, but if I told you that this was taken
from a report in the Guardian newspaper of 26 August 1875, you would,
I guess, trust that this was a reliable, believable event in history.
It
is no leap in the dark to believe that this actually happened even
though we weren't there, we didn't see it, it wasn't filmed, and
there's just a posed photo which could easily be a fake. PPT
But
it's rational and sensible to believe that this happened. The
evidence is sound, though not strictly speaking scientific.
So
evidence comes
in
different
forms
-
and
it's
not
always
the
product
of
a
laboratory.
Of
course, there are superstitions and irrational beliefs.
But
the reason I'm a Christian is because I was brought up to believe the
evidence. And the evidence for Xy is, for those who bother to
investigate, beyond reasonable doubt.
So
how confident are you in you Christ? Give yourself a mark out of
10...
Theophilus
was a wealthy and influential man living in 1C Israel. He had heard
astonishing – barely believable – things about a man called
Jesus, and he wanted to be certain about the truth.
And
so Luke – a learned man, a doctor – was either commissioned by
Theophilus or took it on himself to write an account of the things
that had happened in their days and in their part of the world.
These
events had happened recently enough that people were still talking
about them, still wondering what they meant.
But
Luke wasn't the first person to write about what had happened.
Already, just a few years after the events, a number of people had
written down what had happened.
These
things that had been 'accomplished' (not 'fulfilled', v1 – Luke's
not saying here that these events were fulfilments of the OT)
were so astonishing, so unusual that many people had spent money on
expensive papyrus scrolls, pens and ink to painstakingly write down
what had happened.
Verse
2 tells us that these people have taken eye-witness statements. But
the sceptic will point out that these so-called eye-witnesses were
biased – they were servants of the message.
And
Luke admits it. The only reason we know who his eyewitnesses were is
because he tells us.
If
Luke was Involved in some kind of conspiracy, if he knew it was all
fake but was trying to claim it was real, then he'd hardly admit that
his eyewitnesses were biased – but that's precisely what he does
do!
And
in any case, the phrase, 'servants of the word' may not be a comment
on what they believed
so much as what they did
in writing down their accounts – the mere act of writing down what
happened was an act of service to the message, whether or not they
believed the message.
There
are various theories about the documents that Luke refers to here.
It
could be Matthew or Mark because they contain much of the same
material – sometimes word-for-word the same – and Matthew was
certainly an eye-witness. Mark probably got his information from the
apostle Peter.
But
then there's also some parts of Luke that aren't in either Matthew or
Mark, so Luke must have had at least one other source for that
information, and probably more than one.
(John's
gospel covers almost entirely different events in Jesus' life and was
probably written quite a bit later than the others.)
So,
says Luke, since I myself have carefully investigated everything from
the beginning, it seemed good also to me to write an orderly account.
For
Luke, the historicity
of the events is integral to their meaning and significance.
If
Jesus did not
do and say the things people were claiming he did & said, then
there was no religious or theological meaning or significance to them
whatsoever.
And
it's not just Luke who thinks this way: all of the Bible's authors
admit quite openly that Christianity stands or falls with the facts
of history – with events that actually happened.
So,
in 1 Cor 15, Paul says, 'If Christ has not been raised, our preaching
is useless and so is your faith. More than that, we are then found to
be false witnesses, for we have testified about God that he raised
Christ from the dead.'
Now
one objection is that these events are simply unbelievable – they
cannot have happened because they don't happen today.
Well,
of course they don't happen today. The whole point of Jesus' coming
is that it was unique because he is unique.
If
the events of Jesus' life happened every day, he would just be an
ordinary man without significance, and no-one would have bothered to
write up his life!
But
perhaps, people say, Luke and the others made up the miracles and the
resurrection.
If
they'd done that, there were plenty of people still living who could
have denied what had happened. They didn't!
If
the Romans or the Jews had taken Jesus' body, why didn't they just
produce it and say – 'Don't be stupid – he's not alive, and
here's his body to prove it.'?
If
Peter and hundreds of others knew that Jesus didn't rise from the
dead, why were they prepared to die for a lie?
The
evidence for Jesus stacks up.
And
so, says Luke to Theophilus, you may know the certainty of the things
you have been taught.
Faith
need not be a leap in the dark.
It
need not be an irrational belief against all the evidence – though,
of course, some beliefs are irrational and deny the evidence.
And
the superstition of atheism is on the march today – and it has Xy
in its sights.
Christianity
is the only rational, sensible, evidence-based belief.
But
because the events of hx are so extraordinary, because they are
clearly from God, they demand a response.
And
in 1 John, we hear what that response must be – page 1225.
In
verses 1-4, John states that he and others have heard, seen and
touched the Word of life – Jesus, who came from God.
And
then from v5 he declares the message that Jesus taught:
“God
is light in him is no darkness at all.” Light and darkness are, of
course, universal images for truth and lies; good and evil.
So
John's saying that Jesus' message was that God is truth and goodness.
God has no dark thoughts, no bad motives, no lies to hide, no
behaviour that is in any way wrong.
But,
v8, if we dare to claim that we're like God and have no sin – that
we have no dark thoughts, no bad motives, no lies to hide, no
behaviour that is in any way wrong - then we deceive ourselves and
the truth is not in us at all.
No,
the truth is that we have done wrong in every area of life.
And
that wrong – that sin – begins with our wrong beliefs: our
rejection of all the evidence that points to the truth – the truth
that Jesus Christ was God-made-man.
For
some people this 'sin' is laughing at the very idea of God and
setting up websites that demand the abolition of belief in God.
For
others the 'sin' is just laziness. They can't be bothered to find out
about Jesus, and don't want their life disturbed by him anyway.
And
very often, underlying this rejection of God, is a deep-seated
commitment to living life their own way and not wanting any
interference from God.
And
they transfer their dislike of God onto Christians – or
God-botherers as Dawkins likes to call us - because we're an easy
target.
And
if you don't believe me that we're now the target for the new
atheists, and if you don't believe that they're on a crusade against
us – have a listen to Radio 4's 'The Infinite Monkey Cage' series,
hosted by Brian Cox.
Or
try to find truthful and positive comments about Christians and Xy
coming from the BBC or the newspapers.
But
John's message in v9 is that we need to admit our ignorance, our
arrogance and our rebellion against God.
We
need to confess that we have deliberately rejected the evidence for
Jesus.
And
when we do that, when we admit our guilt to him, we have the
wonderful assurance that God is merciful and will forgive us and
accept us and purify us so that we can have fellowship with one
another and with him.
But,
v10, if we persist in our arrogance and continue to claim that we're
right in the face of all the evidence that God has given us, and that
there's no such thing as sin, then we've called God a liar, and his
life-giving word can have no place in our lives. Not now, not ever.
We
have consigned ourselves to eternity without him. To an eternity
where everyone sets themselves up as master of their world, and so
condemns themselves to an eternal battle with everyone else.
And
that's not some empty threat to keep people in order as the anti-God
squad claim, it's the simple truth and the inevitable consequence of
our actions and of who God is.
The
choice, as they say, is yours.
Saturday 3 December 2011
Lamenting our sin
Lamentations is probably one of the least read OT books with its long descriptions of how God's wrath has afflicted Israel.
As you read of the horrors perpetrated against men, women and children (e.g. Lam 2:11-12), you want to think that this is all the responsibility of the Bbylonians, but then you read Lam 2:1ff, and you have to face the fact that, somehow, God stands behind all this - in 2:1-19 we read twenty-six times that the LORD has done this. Then in chapter 3, the author gets personal; it's not now unknown Israelites who suffer, but our author himself who is in agony under the LORD's hand (Lam 3:1-18).
But then there's the most astonishing - shocking - turnaround (Lam 3:19-25).
Now I bet you recognise verses 22f:
But even if we do remember the context, how do we read this as NT, post crucifixion believers? Are we to say, as a young and sincere Christian once said to me, that my suffering (a slipped disk, in my case) was due to a specific sin, and I must confess it in order to be healed? In other words, does God punish our sins and wait for us to repent?
Perhaps the words from the service of the Lord's Supper can help us here. Cranmer (who wrote the original service) was clear about the seriousness of our sin. Having read the commandments to remind the people of their sin, and having read long exhortations and reminders of the seriousness of sin, the minister then leads the congregation in the confession:
But then, the minister reads the reassuring words of Scripture:
However, there is another strand in the NT, and that is the Lord's discipline. The classic text for this is Hebrews 12:4-11, but in Romans 5:1-5 we see that Paul first insists that we have peace with God before then explaining the cause of our suffering - to produce endurance, character and hope.
So our experience of God is different from that of the OT people of God. They experienced God's wrath for themselves, in the hope that they would return to God and receive his love and mercy. And as we read of the horror of being under the wrath of God, we should remember two things. First, it's a picture of hell, and second, it's a picture of what Jesus suffered for us.
And this should spur us on to praise and thank the Lord Jesus for his sufferings on our behalf, offering our whole lives to him in worship and adoration as a 'living sacrifice' (Rom 12:1). And it should remind us that our loving Father disciplines us for our good and for his glory, that we might be more holy and better reflect the image of Christ.
As you read of the horrors perpetrated against men, women and children (e.g. Lam 2:11-12), you want to think that this is all the responsibility of the Bbylonians, but then you read Lam 2:1ff, and you have to face the fact that, somehow, God stands behind all this - in 2:1-19 we read twenty-six times that the LORD has done this. Then in chapter 3, the author gets personal; it's not now unknown Israelites who suffer, but our author himself who is in agony under the LORD's hand (Lam 3:1-18).
But then there's the most astonishing - shocking - turnaround (Lam 3:19-25).
Now I bet you recognise verses 22f:
The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases;We love to recite that, but as is so often the case with 'nice' OT verses, we've completely forgotten the context - the horrific context - the context of God's unleashed wrath against a faithless, idolatrous, disobedient people. And not just any people, his own covenant people.
his mercies never come to an end;they are new every morning;great is your faithfulness.
But even if we do remember the context, how do we read this as NT, post crucifixion believers? Are we to say, as a young and sincere Christian once said to me, that my suffering (a slipped disk, in my case) was due to a specific sin, and I must confess it in order to be healed? In other words, does God punish our sins and wait for us to repent?
Perhaps the words from the service of the Lord's Supper can help us here. Cranmer (who wrote the original service) was clear about the seriousness of our sin. Having read the commandments to remind the people of their sin, and having read long exhortations and reminders of the seriousness of sin, the minister then leads the congregation in the confession:
ALMIGHTY God, Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, Maker of all things, judge of all men; We acknowledge and bewail our manifold sins and wickedness, Which we, from time to time, most grievously have committed, By thought, word, and deed, Against thy Divine Majesty, Provoking most justly thy wrath and indignation against us. We do earnestly repent, And are heartily sorry for these our misdoings; The remembrance of them is grievous unto us; The burden of them is intolerable. Have mercy upon us, Have mercy upon us, most merciful Father; For thy Son our Lord Jesus Christ's sake, Forgive us all that is past; And grant that we may ever hereafter Serve and please thee In newness of life, To the honour and glory of thy Name; Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
But then, the minister reads the reassuring words of Scripture:
Hear what comfortable words our Saviour Christ saith unto all that truly turn to him.
And then, in the prayer of thanksgiving, he reminds us again of the completeness of our salvation:
COME unto me all that travail and are heavy laden, and I will refresh you. Matthew 11.28
So God loved the world, that he gave his only-begotten Son, to the end that all that believe in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. John 3.16
Hear also what Saint Paul saith :
This is a true saying, and worthy of all men to be received, That Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners. 1Timothy 1.15
Heare also what Saint John saith:
If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous; and he is the propitiation for our sins. 1 John 2.1
ALMIGHTY God, our heavenly Father, who of thy tender mercy didst give thine only Son Jesus Christ to suffer death upon the Cross for our redemption; who made there (by his one oblation of himself once offered) a full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice, oblation, and satisfaction, for the sins of the whole world...In all of this Cranmer was reflecting the clear message of the promises of the OT (e.g. Jer 31:34) and the NT that the punishment for sin fell on Christ so that it does not fall on us. So, returning to the question of the cause of our suffering, we see that it cannot be due to God's punishment for our sin - that was fully dealt with at the cross by Jesus.
However, there is another strand in the NT, and that is the Lord's discipline. The classic text for this is Hebrews 12:4-11, but in Romans 5:1-5 we see that Paul first insists that we have peace with God before then explaining the cause of our suffering - to produce endurance, character and hope.
So our experience of God is different from that of the OT people of God. They experienced God's wrath for themselves, in the hope that they would return to God and receive his love and mercy. And as we read of the horror of being under the wrath of God, we should remember two things. First, it's a picture of hell, and second, it's a picture of what Jesus suffered for us.
And this should spur us on to praise and thank the Lord Jesus for his sufferings on our behalf, offering our whole lives to him in worship and adoration as a 'living sacrifice' (Rom 12:1). And it should remind us that our loving Father disciplines us for our good and for his glory, that we might be more holy and better reflect the image of Christ.
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