John Piippo
Thoughts about God, culture, and the Real Jesus.
Friday, July 10, 2026
Tuesday, July 07, 2026
Calling for Perseverance
Linda and I have several friends who became followers of Jesus in the Jesus Revolution, and have stayed with Him.
I'm one of those. I am 77 years old. I became a Jesus-follower in 1970, when I was twenty-one. I have been following Jesus for fifty-six years!
There are many like me. We have persevered. Through many dangers, toils, and snares.
We are not perfect. We continue to grow into greater and greater Christlikeness.
I am more convinced today than ever that Jesus is the Way. And that there is, as Eugene Peterson calls it, The Jesus Way.
For my devotional times I am re-reading Peterson's A Long Obedience in the Same Direction: Discipleship In an Instant Society. Although Peterson does not self-refer as a prophet, I think he is. His words and thoughts and insights are prescient. To me, Peterson remains more a prophet than some who think they are prophets, and some who love to be seen as a 'prophet'.
Peterson begins his book by quoting the atheist Nietzsche. {FYI - In his recent book Carl Trueman builds on Nietzsche's famous "Parable of the Madman.")
Nietzsche says, "The essential thing 'in heaven and earth' is that there should be a long obedience in the same direction; there thereby results, and has always resulted in the long run, something which has made life worth living."
Peterson adds, "It is this "long obedience in the same direction" which the mood of the world does so much to discourage."
How does our culture discourage persevering in Christ? Peterson writes:
"There is a great market for religious experience in our world; there is little enthusiasm for the patient acquisition of virtue, little inclination to sign up for a long apprenticeship in what earlier generations of Christians called holiness." (Long Obedience, 12)
"In" and "With" as Keys to Living the Jesus-Life
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| (Monroe County Community College) |
A key to living the Jesus Life is found in two little words - "in," and "with."
Paul, in his letters to the various Jesus-communities, uses the phrases "in Christ" and "with Christ," and their variations, over 200 times (e.g. "in him," Christ "in us," and so on).
"In" is a container metaphor. When I am "in" the room, I share in the room's environment. When "out" of the room, I do not experience what is happening in the room.
Consider "with Christ."
- Jesus-followers have died with Christ,
- have risen with Christ,
- and will appear in glory with Christ on his return.
- When Christ died sin was defeated;
- Therefore I, in Christ, am dead to the rule and reign of sin.
- Sin has, for Christ and therefore for me, lost its power.
- When Christ was raised death was defeated;
- therefore, because he lives, I also live and am alive in Christ.
- Where he moves I move;
- where he goes I go.
- I am a new creation, living out of a new ontological status.
"In," and "with," tell us that living the Jesus life is not about trying harder. N.T. Wright writes:
Sunday, July 05, 2026
Biblical Metaphors of Spiritual Transformation

Only God can transform us into increasing Christlikeness.
To be transformed by God we must enter and live in his
presence.
But what is it in us that gets transformed?
The biblical answer is: “spirit.” (Or “heart.”)
I will present an understanding of “spirit” by using some
of the biblical metaphors of spiritual transformation.
Thursday, July 02, 2026
What I Do When the Conference is Over
All the activity and worship and spiritual and mental intake... today it is in the past. So, what now? What will I do in these post-event days? The answer is: what I am always doing.
Which is:
- I will Abide in Jesus today, tomorrow, and the next day. I'll be a branch connected to Jesus the Vine. "Conferences" are not what I am attached to. The same Jesus that spoke to you and me over the past few days will not stop speaking just because we're not at the conference. I have great hope and expectation... now! The God-encounter is a daily thing for me.
- I will Saturate myself in Scripture. God meets me in Scripture. I am more Scripture-focused than I have ever been in all my Jesus-days. I study it. I meditate on it. I ingest it and, by God's Spirit, it gets into me. I'll just keep doing this. The three-day conference has ignited new hope in me. But I do not need a conference to saturate myself in Scripture. This has become my habit.
- I will Listen for God's voice, speaking to me. When God speaks to me today, I'll write it down in my spiritual journal. God has so much to tell me! God is not thinking, "John's no longer participating in the big conference so I won't speak to him in his own home." My view is this. Today is the day of the Lord's activity in my life. Jesus is not the great "I was," he is not the great "I will be," he is the great "I am." Now.
- I will Obey when the Spirit directs. I am not God's perfect servant, as Jesus was. But I do obey God, and find it a delight. I am God's servant. Transform me, Lord, into greater obedient servanthood!
I continue doing four things.
ABIDE
SATURATE
LISTEN
OBEY
A.S.L.O.
Thank God for inspiring conferences, the God-intent of each one being daily, inspirational, Jesus-loving, Jesus-following and life more abundantly. (John 10:10)
The conference is over. But God is not gone. He is with me, his rod and staff, they comfort me. For me, life is all about abiding in him, being connected to him, and being where he wants me to be.
God is a good conference speaker, a very present help in trouble. And, meeting with God is free! (Except that it will cost you everything).
Sit at God's feet today.
Conference with God.
Spiritually, it gets no better than that.
Wednesday, July 01, 2026
I Had a Religious Experience (A Few Thoughts)
| Monroe, In the Country |
I had heard those words a bazillion times before, and they meant nothing to me, functioning at most as a kind of greeting, like "Have a nice day." I awarded them no intellectual assent. But on that day, in that moment, these three beautiful words kick-started a movement in me that has not stilled.
That was my beginning with Jesus. It was not phenomenally the same as what happened to C.S. Lewis, but qualitatively similar. Lewis wrote:
"As the dry bones shook and came together in that dreadful valley of Ezekiel's, so now a philosophical theorem, cerebrally entertained, began to stir and heave and throw off its grave cloths, and stood upright and became a living presence. I was to be allowed to play at philosophy no longer. It might, as I say, still be true that my "Spirit" differed in some way from "the God of popular religion." My Adversary waived the point. It sank into utter unimportance. He would not argue about it. He only said, "I am the Lord"; "I am that I am"; "I am." People who are naturally religious find difficulty in understanding the horror of such a revelation. Amiable agnostics will talk cheerfully about "man's search for God." To me, as I then was, they might as well have talked about the mouse's search for the cat." (From Surprised By Joy)
God found C.S. Lewis, and God found me. I was receptive. I was ready to hear that he existed, and he that loved me.
This did not happen in a vacuum. The soil of my heart had been softening for some time. I had started to look for God. Then, it happened. What shall I make of this?
- If this event had not happened I cannot be sure I would have become a Jesus-follower. It was that important to me. I needed something palpable, tangible, experiential. I don't know if everyone needs such a thing. But I, and Lewis, did.
- The Day of Experience was not only the day God came to me, but it marked the last day of three years of constant drug and alcohol abuse. My pursuits of girls for sex came to a halt,except for one time in the first year as a Jesus-follower where I went back to Egypt and blew it. That failure hit me hard, raising deep questions about who I had become, and what God wanted for me.
- The fact that others in the world religions have religious experiences does not diminish the value of my own. I know, in my study and teaching of comparative religions, that persons in other religions claim religious experiences. I have lines of books on my shelves of comparative religion literature containing testimonies of people of other faiths. I've visited and taught in countries that are predominantly other-religious. But this does nothing to refute the experience I had and, BTW, still have, to the present day. I agree with William James who, in his Varieties of Religious Experience, writes: "A mystical experience is authoritative for the one who experiences it. But a mystical experience that happens to one person need not be authoritative for other people." I'm good with that. (With this exception: the mystical-religious experiences of certain other persons have carried authority with me because of their credibility. For example, my wife Linda has experienced many things, from God, that amaze me.)
- The initial religious experience ripped me out of non-reflective deism, weak agnosticism, and practical atheism into full-blown Christian theism. Historically, this is undoubtable. I now believed in God, and in Jesus. I changed my undergraduate major from music theory to philosophy (fortunately for me the philosophy department at Northern Illinois University was excellent!). I viewed Philosophy as the intellectual agora for addressing and discussing life's Big Questions. I now believed. This experiential belief had an evidential quality for me, and propelled me to go after an understanding of what had happened. Fifty-three years later, this has not stopped. Today I am a deeper believer in God and Jesus than ever.
- I think true religion (not the jeans - they are way too expensive) necessarily includes experience. In my studies of world religions, experience is paramount. Hebrew-Christianity, for example, is essentially about a relationship with God, a mutual indwelling experiential reality. This includes praying-as-dialogue with God, the sense of God's presence, being-led by God, and so on. As well as worship. Worship is experiential and logical in the sense that: If God is love, and God is real, and love is about relationship (love has an "other"), then it follows that one will know and be known by God. ("Know," in Hebrew, means experiential intimacy, not Cartesian subject-object unfamiliarity.) (See Matthew Elliott, Faithful Feelings: Rethinking Emotion in the New Testament.)
- I realize certain atheists claim to have no religious experience at all. John Allen Paulos, for example, in his Irreligion, claims to not have a religious bone in his body. I don't doubt this. This fact does not rationally deter me, just as I am certain C.S. Lewis's religious experiences don't move Paulos from his atheism. (I'm now thinking of Antony Flew's recent conversion from atheism to deism. Flew was moved by the logic of the fine-tuning argument for God's existence. And the case of the famous and brilliant British atheist A.J. Ayer who had a vision and began to be interested in God.)
- I am often taken back to my initial God-encounter. It functions, for me, as a raison d-etre. Philosophically, it's one of a number of "properly basic" experiences I've had, and still have, and may quite well have tonight. See here philosophers like William P. Alston.
- Since that original encounter I've supplemented it with ongoing biblical, theological, and philosophical studies. These are important to me. For example, if I thought that Jesus did not actually exist, I would abandon Christianity. (About ten years ago a teacher at one of our local high schools told his students that Jesus did not actually exist. One of our church kids was in his class. She called me, crying. "The teacher told me that he would consider evidence to the contrary if I could come up with some and bring it to class." I told her: "Why not bring me in?" It happened. I spoke in the high school auditorium to 170 students. The word had spread, and some other teachers allowed me to make my presentation. I spoke for 90 minutes on the actual, historical existence of Jesus. That was so much fun! I had students come to me saying things like, "I saw someone on the internet claim that Jesus never existed, but now I see that their reasoning was wrong." For some stuff I've posted on this go here.)
And that it's not sheerly logical and theoretical, but relational and experiential.
*****
For further reading check out I (Still) Believe: Leading Bible Scholars Share Their Stories of Faith and Scholarship, John Byron and Joel Lohr, eds.
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Linda and I are Now Reading...
Holier Than Thou: How God's Holiness Helps Us Trust Him
By Jackie Hill Perry
Linda recently finished Perry's recent book and loved it!
Upon Waking: 60 Daily Reflections to Discover Ourselves and the God We Were Made For
Teaching Spiritual Formation at Payne Theological Seminary for Nine Weeks


















