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Doubt

December 19, 2008

Worth Betting the Farm On

From the Editor: I can't think of a better post to close out the year with. I'll still be sending out the Daily Inspiration emails, but I won't be posting on the blog again until Monday, January 5, as I'll be taking some needed time off.

Wishing you blessings today,

Keith 

There is simply no one more worth trusting that Jesus. There is no one whose understanding of life has come close to his. There is no one who affected history like him. There is simply no other source — no book, no guru, no hunch, no personal experience — worth betting the farm on. As Elton Trueblood so well said, "A Christian is a person who, with all the honesty of which he is capable, becomes convinced that the fact of Jesus Christ is the most trustworthy that he knows in his entire universe of discourse."

Jesus is in the life-changing business. From the very beginning all kinds of people were drawn to him and would come to him — satisfied people, messed-up people, lepers and injured people, forgotten people, despised people, prostitutes, tax collectors, admired people, wealthy people, religious leaders. There was something about this man Jesus that made their hearts cave in and then be born again. Read More from This Book.


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From Faith and Doubt by John Ortberg


 


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November 24, 2008

Will You Let Go?

From the Editor: Great advice from John Ortberg. Reminds me of Hebrews 12:1-3, “... let us throw off everything that hinders ...”.

Wishing you blessings today,

Keith

There are three moves in the "leap of faith": letting go of the trapeze — whatever your trapeze is, waiting, and then being caught. God comes to you and says, "Let go. Will you let go?"

God came to Abraham and said, "Let go of everything familiar. Let go of your family, your home, and your culture, and go where I tell you to go. Will you do that? Will you let go?" Jesus came to a rich young ruler one day. He loved him, and he said, "Will you let go of your trapeze?" The rich ruler's trapeze was called "money." "Will you give away all your possessions or sell them and give the money to the poor and come follow me?" Jesus spoke to a woman caught in an adulterous affair. He said, "Go and sin no more." Will you let go of that relationship that you know dishonors God?

What are you to let go of? Anything that will keep you from God.

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by John Ortberg

Any comments or testimonies today?

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November 14, 2008

Evidence of Changed Lives

From the Editor: I lead a Bible study on Tuesday evenings, and this Tuesday we studied Acts 14 where Paul is stoned and left for dead. After the brothers gathered around him (I’m sure there was some praying and healing going on), Paul gets up and waltzes back into the city where he was just stoned! The very guy who stood supporting those who stoned Stephen for proclaiming Jesus as Lord is now stoned for the same reason. Pretty dramatic change.

Wishing you blessings today,

Keith

A proud, vindictive, violent, arrogant, self-occupied religious leader named Saul of Tarsus was traveling down the road when suddenly he had a vision of Jesus. As a matter of historical record, he became Paul — a different man with a different name, whose mind, writings, love for people, and self-sacrificial gift of his life to the world were so compelling that human minds are still fascinated by him two thousand years later. People devote their lives to studying what he wrote. How did that life get changed? The evidence of lives changed by Jesus is so abundant that the full story can never be told. It can never be matched. Not by any culture, by any book, by any program, by any hero. I have never heard the story of an accidental, meaningless universe changing a life like that.

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by John Ortberg

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November 10, 2008

Everyone Knows Two Things

From the Editor: I’m finding Faith & Doubt by John Ortberg to be an intriguing work, not like his usual fare, but geared more toward those who are searching for answers. He gently addresses questions many have about Christianity all the while presenting it as both reasonable and appealing.

Wishing you blessings today,

Keith

Every human being knows two things: There is a way we ought to behave. We do not invent this code; we only discover it. We might be fuzzy on the details of it sometimes, but we have a general idea of what it is. We also know that we don't live up to this standard. We all fall short. We need forgiveness. We need grace. We need to get fixed.

Every time people argue, they are implying that the universe is not an accident, that there is a moral order built into the way things are, because it was put there by Somebody, and that Somebody is God. The good news is that he is a gracious God. That's part of why I believe in God.

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by John Ortberg

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October 15, 2008

We Must Move On

Theologian Lesslie Newbigin writes that we live in an age that favors doubt over faith. We often speak of "blind faith" and "honest doubt." Both faith and doubt can be honest or blind, but we rarely speak of "honest faith" or "blind doubt." Both faith and doubt are needed, yet it is faith that is more fundamental. Even if I doubt something, I must believe there are criteria by which it can be judged. I must believe something before I can doubt anything. Doubt is to belief what darkness is to light, what sickness is to health. It is an absence. Sickness may be the absence of health, but health is more than the absence of sickness. So it is with doubt and faith. Doubt is a good servant but a poor master.

"Doubt is useful for a while.... If Christ spent an anguished night in prayer, if he burst out from the cross, 'My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?' then surely we are permitted doubt. But we must move on. To choose doubt as a philosophy of life is akin to choosing immobility as a means of transportation."

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by John Ortberg

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October 08, 2008

One Road to Certainty

There is one road to certainty — through a door marked "death." Then I will know, or there will be no me left to know. But I need to decide how I will live on this side of the door. Once we have been born, trying to put off deciding what to do about God is like jumping off a diving board and trying to put off actually entering the water. When I think about this urgency, I'm reminded of a saying my friend Kent the drummer told me about: "If I refuse to sing a word or play a note until I'm certain of perfection, there will never be music."

The question of faith is never just a question of calculating the odds of God's existence. We are not just probability calculators. We live in a burning building. It's called a body. The clock is ticking.

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by John Ortberg

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October 01, 2008

Faith Keeps Spreading

Ever since what was modestly called the Enlightenment, people have been predicting the demise of faith in God. I want to listen to doubters and not just argue with them, partly because deep down I have doubts enough of my own, and partly because when I'm just trying to win arguments, I turn into Dan Ackroyd debating Jane Curtain in an old Saturday Night Live sketch: "Jane, you ignorant ..." Nobody wants to be around me then. Not even me.

I do not like books by believers or doubters that make it sound like the question of God is simple, that anyone with half a brain will agree with them, that people in the other camp are foolish and evil. I have read and known too many people who don't believe in God who are better and wiser than me. But I do not think the professional doubters will make faith go away. The predictors keep dying, and faith keeps spreading.

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by John Ortberg

Any comments or testimonies today?

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