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Gospels

July 06, 2008

The Gospel Jesus Proclaimed

Listen to the typical gospel presentation nowadays. You will hear sinners entreated with words like, "accept Jesus Christ as personal Savior"; "ask Jesus into your heart"; "invite Christ into your life"; or "make a decision for Christ." You may be so accustomed to hearing those phrases that it will surprise you to learn that none of them is based on biblical terminology. They are the products of a diluted gospel.

The gospel Jesus proclaimed was a call to discipleship, a call to follow Him in submissive obedience, not just a plea to make a decision or pray a prayer. Jesus' message liberated people from the bondage of their sin while it confronted and condemned hypocrisy. It was an offer of eternal life and forgiveness for repentant sinners, but at the same time it was a rebuke to outwardly religious people whose lives were devoid of true righteousness. It put sinners on notice that they must turn from sin and embrace God's righteousness. It was in every sense good news, yet it was anything but easy-believism.

Read part of this book...
by John MacArthur

Any comments or testimonies today?

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April 09, 2008

primary

You will have trouble (John 16:33): Jesus said this as part of his farewell address to his disciples, and he apparently meant it, because all but one of the apostles were killed for following Jesus. Faith certainly was not a shield against trouble for them.

"I tell you, my friends," Jesus says, "do not be afraid of those who kill the body and after that can do no more. But I will show you whom you should fear: Fear him who, after your body has been killed, has the authority to throw you into hell. Yes, I tell you, fear him"
(
Luke 12:4-5).

As best I can tell from his words, Jesus seems to say we have too small a goal. We crave physical protection when something greater, of more value, is at stake. Our souls, that part of us which is eternal, which isn't dust and returning to dust, should be our primary concern.

Read part of this book...
by Matt Rogers

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March 19, 2008

searching

The story of the lost son is packed full with vital truth; no wonder Latin tradition called it "the gospel within the gospel." Here we see who we are, when we are at our best, and when we are at our worst. What we see isn't encouraging. Humans don't do well either as sinners or would-be saints. How easily we are attracted by the slightest scent of sin; how frequently we tumble headlong into the pit of dead, heartless religion.

And then, in just a few words, we see what God is like and we sigh with relief. He is like the smitten father who anxiously scans the horizon, looking for the crazy, mixed-up kid that is me and you both. Prodigals utterly matter to God.

Read part of this book...

by Jeff Lucas

Any comments or testimonies today?

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August 27, 2007

Are the Canonical Gospels Trustworthy?

The Case for the Real Jesus: A Journalist Investigates Current Attacks on the Identity of Christ by Lee Strobel

Go back to Helmut Koester’s statement: it's just dogmatism and prejudice to privilege the canonical Gospels. If you picture fifteen or twenty gospels as all being part of one soupy gray porridge, then picking out four of them and saying these four are privileged—well, yeah, that does sound rather dogmatic. But that grossly misrepresents the evidence. Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John were earlier than all these other gospels, and they have credible connections with the first generation, apostolic, eyewitness sources. The only way to deny that is to say, well, I don't care what the evidence says, I will instead rely on my own intuition and guesswork and preference. Now, I call that dogmatic and prejudiced!

—Craig A. Evans, PhD

The Case for the Real Jesus: A Journalist Investigates Current Attacks on the Identity of Christ by Lee Strobel

Any comments or testimonies today?


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May 21, 2007

What Is Truth?

What is truth? This famous question was uttered by Pilate at Jesus' trial after Jesus said, "You say that I am a king. In fact, the reason I was born and came into the world is to testify to the truth. Everyone on the side of truth listens to me" (John 18: 37-38). This question is just as relevant today as it was 2000 years ago.

Popular culture says truth is relative, personal, and in the mind of the beholder. Competing belief systems are not to be challenged (judged) because they are viewed as "truth" to those who believe them. Yet the Bible paints a much different picture of truth.

Jesus said, "I am the way, the truth, and the life" (John 14:6) If Jesus is the truth, can Buddha also be truth? Can Islam be truth? In other words, if Jesus came to testify of the truth, can any contradictory belief systems also be true?

When you look at the ministry of Jesus, he was all about challenging the beliefs of those he came into contact with. Why? Because there is a standard of truth, and it's critical for everyone to know the truth in order to be set free from darkness. Jesus came to show us the way and to pay the price for our freedom.

We don't follow Jesus because we just believe Christianity is true for us; we follow Jesus because he is the embodiment of truth. He came to reveal truth to everyone so that everyone might be rescued through him (John 3:16). But we must accept the truth and become a follower of Jesus to experience the freedom he purchased for us by his blood.

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April 11, 2006

At the Empty Tomb

Walter Wangerin Jr. by Walter Wangerin Jr.

She hasn’t moved. Still she kneels in front of the tomb. And she is weeping. Not in lamentation; not in remembrance and honor for her Lord, which would have been her final act of love; but in loss. The body of Jesus is lost. Therefore, Maryam has lost her life. She has lost her way. There is absolutely nowhere to go from here. She will lie down and die before the Feast of Weeks.

A roseate light falls on Maryam’s small back, which shakes with her silent sobbing. She is a slender damsel bending groundward. She is a stalk of sweet grass, bent by the jackal’s paw in its passage. Her face swells; her hands are wringing themselves into a bloodless white.

A voice says, Woman? Two voices, echoing as if in a stone basilica, say: Woman? Why are you crying?

Her eyes shut tight, it seems to Maryam that the sun is bright against her face. But when she opens her eyes she finds no sun. The sun has not arisen—and when it does it will rise behind her. No, the light is playing her false: it comes from the clothing and the countenances of two men sitting inside the sepulcher, one at the head and one at the foot of Jesus’s shroud. They are the ones who have spoken to her.

Slowly, Maryam rises to her feet. “O sirs,” she whispers in a voice destroyed by sorrow, “because they’ve taken my Lord, and I don’t know where they’ve put him.”

Her eyes ache. Her sight is stunned by the angelic brilliance. Instinctively, she turns away, rubbing the water that pools in her vision—and there, in the road, she makes out the blurred figure of a man.

“Woman, why are you crying?” asks the figure, walking toward her. “Tell me: what are you looking for?”

“Him,” Maryam answers. “My Lord.” She begins to babble: “Are you an intendant of cemeteries? Did someone ask you to take the body out of this tomb? Did you? Did you take the body, I mean? If so, could you tell me where you put him? I’ll go, and I will get him—”

But the watery figure continues to approach her until he stands but an arm’s length away. He, too, is growing bright. But not like the men in the tomb. Like the morning. He is the morning itself, splendid, filling the space between heaven and earth, sparkling like stars ascending and descending on the open tomb!

O good and holy God!—who?—

Then the figure clothed in white, this man composed completely of light, speaks. He utters a single word. But in that word Maryam knows everything. She knows him; she knows herself; she knows the grace of the Father and the glory of his only begotten Son.

The Light says, Maryam.

Jesus! It’s Jesus!

He calls her by name, saying, “Maryam from Magdala.”

She leaps straight up and cries, “Rabboni!”

Oh, how beautiful the planes of his face! He stands with his head in the heavens, and yet he is only just her size; and he is—his rust-bright eyes and the freckles that emblazon them are—deft and dazzling and full of life.

Bolder than she has ever been, Maryam spreads her arms. She will embrace the Lord whom she loves! She will throw herself upon the neck of him for whom her face and her throat are flaming: “O my darling Teacher!”

But: “Hush,” the Lord commands her. “Don’t take hold of me,” he says, “I haven’t returned to my Father yet.”

Such impetuosity, Maryam! You’ve never acted like this in front of Jesus! And on any day before she would have been terrified by such emotion; she’d have feared it was her devils returning again. But on this day, at this daybreak hour, nothing at all can trouble Maryam from Magdala. Not even the Hush! of her Lord.

Jesus: A Novel

Because he is alive! And so is she: alive.

And more than that, he has a job for her to do. See? Maryam has become the first servant of the newly risen Jesus. Maryam, that once bore evil spirits here and there, now bears the good news of the Lord!

For “Go to my brothers,” he says. “Tell them that I am returning to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.”

Fleet afoot is our pale, our wraithlike child! And she has torn the veil from round her face; it streams behind her as she runs. Her ankles flash like lambs on the hillside, her feet like ibex high on the mountains. And her mouth is open. And she is singing. And the song precedes her where she goes.

I have seen, sings Maryam from Magdala.

She is greater and more beautiful than the swallow now. She is the osprey, white at the throat, her bosom and abdomen snowy white: I have seen the Lord!

She is the osprey who skims the seas to wash her feet in their salty waters. And high above her, soaring on the mighty thermals, on those invisible pillars of the dome of the universe, flies the eagle.

I’ve seen the Lord! I’ve heard his voice! Attend his word, O nations, And rejoice!

From Jesus: A Novel by Walter Wangerin Jr.

March 17, 2006

A New View of Salt

Becoming a Contagious Christian

by Bill Hybels and Mark Mittelberg

Why would Jesus use a metaphor like salt? What does salt do? These days, it makes us nervous because it can lead to high blood pressure. So we feel guilty every time we reach for the shaker. But let’s look across the spans of time and think about the primary uses of salt throughout history.

The first thing that comes to mind is that salt makes us thirsty. That’s why bars serve salty pretzels and peanuts free of charge, to get people to drink more. Or so I’m told!

Salt does something else, too: it spices things up. Who’d want corn on the cob without it? When we eat something that tastes a little bland we reflexively reach for the salt in order to enhance the flavor.

And salt preserves. We don’t use it for this purpose much anymore, but before the days of the Frigidaire, salt was widely used to prevent foods from spoiling. Certain meats could be preserved for long periods of time if they were carefully packed in salt.

So salt stimulates thirst, it adds excitement to the taste of things, and it holds back decay. Which leads us to the big question: Which of these did Jesus have in mind when He looked at His followers and said, “You are the salt of the earth”?

The short answer is, we don’t know! How’s that for candor? If you read the scholars on this question, using poker parlance, they’ll hold the three cards and say, “Pick a card, any card. Or all three cards, if you’d like.”

It could be that Jesus meant for salt to symbolize the idea of creating thirst. When Christians are in tune with the Holy Spirit, and when they live in their world with a sense of purpose, and with peace and joy, this often creates a spiritual thirst in the people around them.

At Willow Creek we often hear testimonies about this. People say things like, “I was at work, and I noticed someone in my department who lived a little differently and talked a bit differently and valued some things differently. It caught my interest. I sensed a growing spiritual thirst inside of me that I’d never experienced before.”

When Christians live out their faith with authenticity and boldness, they put a little zing into a sometimes bland cup of soup. They catch people off guard and make them wince. They wake people up with their challenges and seemingly radical points of view. And they overturn a few applecarts here and there. In short, they put some spice into the lives of those around them.

What’s more, when believers are living Christ-honoring lives they hold back the moral decay in society. I hope that’s what’s happening with the abortion dilemma, with environmental concerns, with racism, and with the breakdown of the family. As Christians honor God, he uses them to stem the tidal wave of evil that’s threatening to sweep the land.

So pick a card—any card. Any or all three might be exactly what Jesus had in mind when he used the word “salt.” But upon further reflection you might discover additional reasons Jesus chose the salt metaphor, reasons that can be easily overlooked.

First, in order for salt to have the greatest possible impact, it must be potent enough to have an effect. And second, for any impact to take place, salt has to get close to whatever it’s supposed to affect. So Jesus may have chosen the salt metaphor because salt requires both potency and proximity to do its thing.

That’s exactly what we need as Christians if we’re going to influence people who are outside the family of God. We must have high potency, which means a strong enough concentration of Christ’s influence in our lives that his power and presence will be undeniable to others. And we’ve got to have plenty of proximity. We need to get close to people we’re hoping to reach in order to allow his power to have its intended effect.

In (Matthew 5:13) Jesus said that salt that is without savor and of inferior quality is worthless. It has lost its power. It won’t create much thirst, won’t add much spice, won’t retard much decay. It can have all kinds of proximity—it can be poured all over something we want it to affect—but if it lacks potency it is, Jesus said, useless. About all it does is give people something to stomp on.

By the same token, highly flavored, industrial-strength salt has great potency, but it can’t produce any results unless it touches something. As Becky Pippert wrote many years ago, unless salt gets poured out of the shaker, it remains a mere table ornament.

That, unfortunately, is a fairly good description of a lot of people who call themselves Christians. Oh, they’ve got a lot of potency in their own relationship with Christ. They walk a God-honoring path in their personal patterns of living. But they never get out where they can rub up next to people who need their influence. They’re good-looking table ornaments, but they have low impact.

Do you see why Jesus’ choice of the salt metaphor was so compelling? With it he was able to show that both components—potency and proximity—have to be employed before we can fulfill our mission to have a spiritual impact on our family and friends.

From Becoming a Contagious Christian by Bill Hybels and Mark Mittelberg