Nebby’s Giant Bunny…

In Sunday School we’ve been studying the book of Daniel. Which is a really rocking book. I’ve enjoyed digging into the scriptures, the commentaries and cross-references in preparing for class. This week we’re in Daniel chapter 3 which talks about the fiery furnace.

The genus of tossing Rack, Shack and Benny (or Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah who were renamed to Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego) into the smelter was Nebby (aka Nebuchadnezzar) erecting a 90 ft (or as King James would say, threescore cubits) golden statue.

The commentaries reject the notion that the whole statue was gold, accepting that the statue was probably overlaid in gold. The commentaries also state that the statue could be seen from a radius of 15 miles.

Well the old navigator in me decided to test that number, and so thanks to a height of eye calculator, I ran the numbers and found that the horizon (as seen from the top of the statue would be ~12.7 miles so I guess the commentator’s round the number up. They do state that it was erected in the center of the plain of Dura, and state that there is evidence of a large mound that could have been where the statue was placed. Which is an interesting rabbit trail to follow, but not right now.

image To get an idea of how tall such a statue would be (and the commentators state that it was probably more of a stylistic monolith, as the ratio of height to width suggests) in a plain barren of other tall buildings. While thinking of this, I recalled a road trip we had taken, and on the way home, we drove through Amarillo, TX, and noticed a huge cross (that is actually in Groom, TX). This cross is 190′ tall, and is eclipsed by two other crosses in the northern hemisphere (one in Effingham, Ill was built after the Groom cross is 196 feet tall, and the other in Valle de los Caídos, Spain which is 154 m. above ground (meters!) which probably accounts for the hill, whose crest it is built upon ) To appreciate the size of these crosses, both can be veiwed on Goggle* Google Maps. (GroomValle de los Caidos)

I remember driving quite a while trying to see what that was, then realizing it was a cross, then stopping to see what was all about. The Groom cross is built using tin siding, and has the bronze stations of the cross surrounding its base. While Nebby’s Bunny (a reference to Veggie Tales, where they replace the gold monolithic statue with a giant chocolate bunny to entertain the kids, and create a great catchy tune…) was half the size of the Groom cross, I’m sure it would still catch the eye of people for miles around.

*Edit, thanks for mocking my typo Deboobily… paybacks.. yadda yadda. 😉

Five is right out!

Each morning, as part of my ritual, I begin my blog reading. I have several that I frequent regularly, and a few that I read waaaaay too much. But there are three that I look forward to each morning, because I know that there will always be something edifying, convicting or uplifting in what I read.

One –Pyromaniacs is a group blog of Phil Johnson, Dan Phillips and Frank Turk (aka Centurion) (technically they list Pecadillo as a member, but I’ve never seen an actual post of his) write many post on many edifying topics. Their zeal for truth is evident. They always have sharp wit, with kicking graphics that put a flavor to their blog branding that others should emulate.

Two – Gospel Driven Church is the blog of Jared Wilson, a great writer, with great insights. His posting of late have challenged me to find way I can proclaim the gospel in how I write and how I teach. Convicting often, but humble always Jared’s writing is a welcome stop during my morning coffee.

FiveEvangelical Outpost is Joe Carter’s daily dose of just about everything. Sometimes geeky (see Yak-Shaving and 33 Things) sometimes thoughtful, always worthwhile, EO will be moving to my Daily Reads blogroll (soon as I figure out how I want to sort em out).

What are your favorite blogs to read each day? (and yeah, I’m not counting Angie, Matt or Debily in my three favorite, cuz, well they’re family. )

S.H.A.P.E.

My church is in the beginning stages of a study on S.H.A.P.E.

S.H.A.P.E. comes from Rick Warren’s Purpose Driven Life, and talks about how God has made each believer uniquely made for ministry.  As were in one of our church’s small groups I’ll be studying this series and will most likely have a post or two about the content as we go.

To help a bit in introduction, the acronym stands for this:

S – Spiritual gifts
H – Heart
A – Abilities
P – Personality
E – Experiences

While I agree that each believer possesses each of those attributes, and God will use those things in a believer’s life to expand His kingdom, I think that there are some points along this subject that might be distracting to the larger role where believer’s fit in God’s greater plan.  So I’m taking this first post to talk about some of my reservations, before I really start to study the content of the lesson.

I blogged through 40 Days of Purpose in my old blogs, and since that time I’ve read some critiques of the PDL and all things Purpose Driven.  Admittedly, those critique may have colored my thinkings on how I perceive the content we’re going through.

What I don’t think S.H.A.P.E. should focus on is the individual alone, but more how the individual using his shape becomes part of God’s church, and allows for a better understanding of how the body of Christ works in the world.  The body of Christ is a mystery, and can’t fully be understood, but I think the most real understanding can be seen in the behavior of the local body of believers that is normally called the church (primarily but not limited to the people in the same building on a Sunday morning).

I think we, as Christ followers, are called into a church for it to be a central part of how we live.  It is a family and a place where we can belong, learn, grow, fail, continue, worship, fellowship, minster and serve.

On the face S.H.A.P.E. seems fairly self-centered, and I think might be totally misunderstood that this is a self-help program, where we can learn to be better people,  get our lives under control, or be inspired to do something different, under the guise of doing that which God intends.

That is wrong thinking.  For with Christ we can do all things, yet apart from Him we can do nothing.  If we think S.H.A.P.E. is a way to make us better believers, then we are failing to think big picture.  If the think knowing our S.H.A.P.E will make us better people, then we are failing to serve others.  S.H.A.P.E. cannot be a singular focus, it must be a community focus.  We should better understand how our S.H.A.P.E. fits into the larger body, how our weaknesses are often countered by others’ strengths, and our strengths improved by sometimes opposite strengths.

In 1 Corinthians Paul has a large discourse about how the body of Christ is made up of different people possessing different gifts, and he makes a wonderful analogy about how the physical body could be compared to the spiritual body of Christ.  We are better together than we are alone.  That must be the focus of understanding our personal S.H.A.P.E., is how it is used within the larger shape of the church.

The Long View

Back in grad school one of the texts I was assigned to read was, The Art of the Long View by Peter Schwartz.  The opening chapter contains this paragraph:

 To act with confidence, one must be willing to look ahead and consider uncertainties: “What challenges could the world present me?  How might others respond to my actions?”  Rather than asking such questions, too many people react to uncertainty with denial.  They take an unconsciously deterministic view of events.  They take it for granted that somethings just won’t happen; for example, “oil prices won’t collapse,” or “the Cold War can’t ever end.”  Not having tried to forsee surprising events, they are at a loss for ways to act when upheaval continues.  They create blind spots for themselves.

I recall this text often, because the title is catchy, taking the long view means to look beyond the immediate circumstances and project what the long term effects of an action might be.  I’m not the best at taking the long view on things, but I can appreciate the wisdom of acting today with tomorrow in mind.

I recalled this text again this morning when I read Dan Phillips latest post at Pyromaniacs, titled Temptation: a key element is… I encourage you to read the whole post, however here is an excerpt:

More specifically, this made me think of something I’ve noticed throughout Proverbs. Again and again, Solomon takes something initially appealing, and says, “Now wait, don’t look away just yet, Bunky. I want you to see what this leads to.” And then he ruthlessly and relentlessly tears the misty, gauzy mask off of the tempting path. As it were, he grabs us by the scruff of the neck, and says, “Now you look. Keep looking! Now, do you see what happens?”

The point Dan is making in how we live our life today is the same that Peter makes in making business decisions.  Count the cost.  Create a scenario and see what this ultimately leads to.  Too often, at least for me, I take too short of a view.  The scenario I create in my mind is too short sighted, or too rose colored.  Some instances require taking a worst case scenario, or at least a poor case scenario, in mind.

The wisdom of Dan’s post is also grounded in the wisdom of the book of Proverbs.  We need to keep our eyes and ears on scripture to be able to rightly understand the consequences of our actions.  The consequences of what we do (and too often, don’t do) today will rise up tomorrow.  It is our duty and in our best interest to take a long view in everything we do.

Gospel Driven Church

No not the book, the blog.

Thinkling Jared’s new blog. He’s had a few and I’m glad to see him start this new one. His theological musings have always inspired and enlightened me. He has the awesome ability to write clearly, and make a point that sticks (and sometimes stings).

Here is a snippet from one of his posts, A Post-It Theses for these Newfangled Glass Church Doors :

1. Discipleship is designed to be experienced in community. God saves individuals, but He does not save them to an individual faith but to a kingdom life populated with other citizens who share that faith.

2. The Bible designates one vessel to hold this kingdom community, and it is The Church. You might fraternize with other believers in coffee shops, informal communes, online chat rooms or forums, blogs, bars, or the big outdoors, but only biblical churches satisfy the discipleship need for The Church.

3. Honest Christians will differ on what constitutes a “biblical church,” and while disagreement is understandable and okay, beware of any church that says, explicitly or implicitly, “we do it right” or “we do it better” than the church down the street.

4. Ecclesiological one-upmanship (“My church is better than your church”) is a sin.

5. The reason you should not give up on church or The Church is because Jesus did not give up on you. And if He calls the church His Body, giving up on it means giving up on Him.

6. There are no perfect churches, especially if they have people in them.

7. Expecting a church to “fit” you or to always be comfortable or catering to your needs is arrogance and foolishness.

I look forward to reading more of his posts, and who knows… maybe it will inspire me to write better, or at least more often.

Honor Thy Parents

I’m speaking tonight (on a whim) at the closing of our church’s youth camp. It has been a series of evening activities, culminating in this night. Tacky Night. Topic of the person that I’m stepping in for: ‘Touching the lives of your Family’, with the tag line – Christians are hard on their families.

Well yeah.

There was also some discussion on focusing it on how teens can bless their families, particularly their siblings, by not being selfish, but be generous.

So I look to the biblical texts to find some great examples of sibling generosity.

Practically a null set. From Cain and Abel to John and James (the sons of Thunder) there is a dearth of sibling kindness to each other. Jesus’ parable of the Prodigal Son is the hallmark of selfish behavior, with both the wayward and the homebody brother being entirely selfish. So what can I point to to show a clear instruction, where is the point where I can hammer home the point of sibling good will?

I think I’ll turn to the fourth commandment. Indeed the one that Paul says comes with a blessing.

“Honor your father and mother, so that you may live long in the Land the Lord is giving you” (Ex 20:12)

The longest relationship we’ll have while living might be with our siblings. Some of the memories I have of family reunions are of siblings getting together to honor their parents. Then after the parents are gone, some siblings continue the tradition, in honor of their parents.

It is odd that a similar command to love ones children isn’t on the big ten list of commandments. Perhaps because that is part of us, to love our children. Each individually, as a singular expression of ourselves. And corporately as part of the larger organism we call family. Many of my audience tonight will be youth, those preparing to make the leap into adulthood, leaving the nest. With that time in life comes a natural friction, a yearning to leave our parents, and strike out on our own. How can they possibly do that, and still honor their parents? For kids and teens still in the home. You know the sullen and bershon teens that are slowly withdrawing, wanting to be grown up, but to young to be able to. How can they honor their parents?

Love the ones the parents love. Serve the ones the parents serve. Love your brother/sister as you would love yourself. I think that act of unselfishness, putting our siblings before ourselves, is the strongest act of love we can show our parents.  One that at age 39 and a half, I know I need to improve.

Upward Leadership Conference – KC

Attending with 5 great friends (including my wife, who is still my best friend…) the Upward Leadership Conference to help us prepare for Upward Basketball. I’ve been involved with Upward sinece 1999, and this is my first year to step up and be the League Director at our church. We’re haveing a good time, and the worship and vision ‘seed casting’ last night was just the right way to kick off the event. Click to read more about the Upward Mission Statement and Values

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Must. Post.

Team Pyro has dragged out the Lordship thread for three days, I can’t see why can’t revisit it. 🙂

One of the comments, by ‘Don Sands’ in the thread now yearning for 400 posts was this:

“we need to walk a fine line” -Phil

“we are sinners and saints all at once! That is the paradox of evangelicalism. The Antinomian and the Perfectionist would abolish the paradox– the one drowning the saint in the sinner, and the other concealing the sinner in the saint.” B. B. Warfield

Which captures the question succinctly.

One of those arguing for a non-Lordship, or at least contra-Phil, Lou Martuneac suggests:

This position means man cannot believe or express faith and repentance unless he has first been regenerated, been born again.

The Bible has a different view. Jesus said, “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.”

Which is fairly cherty-picking scripture, since if you back up in the context of the verse Jesus answers the question:

Nicodemus said to him, “How can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter a second time into his mother’s womb and be born?” Jesus answered, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. Do not marvel that I said to you, ‘You must be born again.’ The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear its sound, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.” (John 3:4ff)

It is an arguable point, I suppose that the 3:16 verse is answering a different question. Nicodemus marveled at how on could be born again, and Jesus is saying it is a doing of the Spirit, not of man. Isn’t that what regeneration is, a work of the Spirit?