Wednesday, October 31, 2018
Lauren Daigle - Freedom from Texting and Distraction
I ask people to please put their cell phones away during worship, and while I am preaching. Here Lauren Daigle explains why.
Daigle recently noted during an interview that social media has led many believers to experience a spiritual identity crisis—and she's no exception. She talked about how she caught herself texting during service and drowning out God with all the digital noise of the modern era. So how did she find freedom? She explains in this video.
Two Reasons People Don't Pray
Monroe County |
Two reasons for this are: 1) unbelief; and 2) an incomplete view of prayer.
Unbelief is one reason for a prayerless life. If prayer means talking with God about what we are thinking and doing together, then how could anyone pass up daily opportunities to meet, one-on-one, with the Maker of Heaven and Earth? I can assure you that, if the President of the United States (or any country's President) called and said they wanted to meet with me today, I would stop typing this post, and say "Excuse me, I have a meeting with our President." I would drop everything to do this! A chance to meet with the most powerful leader in the world! You would not be able to keep me from such a meeting. And, I would go in awe and trembling.
Multiply this unlikely earthly scenario a gazillion times and we have the matter of prayer as meeting with the all-powerful, all-knowing, omnibenevolent, necessarily existent, Creator and Sustainer of all things. If someone can't find time for this, I suggest it may it be because they don't believe.
Another reason Christians don't pray is because they have been taught an incomplete, one-sided theory of prayer. This is the idea of prayer as essentially "asking," or "petition." This is found in, e.g., the theology of Karl Barth, who so emphasized the "Wholly Otherness" of God that the "I am with you always" God got viewed as distant. This can lead to talking to God, more than conversing with Him. We come to God mostly with requests. We approach this distant God when we're in trouble.
I know there's more to Barth than this. But this was his emphasis. See how this is expressed in, e.g., the Barthianism and Calvinism of Donald Bloesch, especially his book The Struggle of Prayer. I had Don (who was a great theologian, a very good person, a passionate lover of Jesus, and graciously agreed to speak to my seminary class) come to speak in a class I was teaching on prayer at Northern Baptist Theological Seminary. The emphasis was, for me, too much on speaking to God but not enough on hearing from God.
If a Jesus-follower thought "God won't speak to me," this could discourage them from praying.
I like how Anglican theologian Kenneth Leech writes about this. Leech says:
"Many people see prayer as asking God for things, pleading with a remote Being about the needs and crises of earth. sometimes these pleas produce a response; often, they do not. So prayer is seen in essentially functional terms - is it effective or not? Does it produce results?... But in order to pray well we need to disengage ourselves from this way of thinking." (Leech, True Prayer, 7)
This is the myth of "effective prayer," with effectiveness seen as some kind of measuring stick. To focus excessively on the effectiveness of prayer is to miss the relationship with God. It is to view God as some object, from which to "get results."
How can we help people who "can't find time to pray" because they don't believe? My view is that only God can change their hearts about this. We should not try to force this on someone. We can create opportunities and contexts for others to encounter God. When I send people out to pray as an assignment in my seminary courses, some become believers (in a God who has much to say to them,) and get a praying life that lasts for a lifetime.
We can also introduce the idea that true prayer is about a conversational relationship, rather than simply a 9-1-1 call.
***
My two books are:
My two books are:
Tuesday, October 30, 2018
To the American Church: We Are in a War
Cemetery on the Mount of Olives, Jerusalem |
Pastors - I am setting up a conference call for Monday, Nov. 19, 9 PM EST.
The Purpose: To define "revival," share how we can prepare the soil in our churches for revival, and pray together for revival.
If you want to join me for this conference call please email me at: johnpiippo@msn.com.
Now... back to THE WAR.
In today's New York Times David Brooks writes:
"These mass killings are about many things — guns, demagogy, etc. — but they are also about social isolation and the spreading derangement of the American mind.
Killing sprees are just one manifestation of the fact that millions of Americans find themselves isolated and alone. But there are other manifestations of this isolation, which involve far more carnage.
The suicide epidemic is a manifestation. The suicide rate is dropping across Europe. But it has risen by 30 percent in the United States so far this century. The suicide rate for Americans between 10 and 17 rose by more than 70 percent between 2006 and 2016 — surely one of the most shocking trends in America today.
Every year nearly 45,000 Americans respond to isolation and despair by ending their lives. Every year an additional 60,000 die of drug addiction. Nearly twice as many people die each year of these two maladies as were killed in the entire Vietnam War.
The rising levels of depression and mental health issues are yet another manifestation. People used to say that depression and other mental health challenges were primarily about chemical imbalances in the brain.
But as Johann Hari argues in his book “Lost Connections,” these mental health issues are at least as much about problems in life as one’s neurochemistry. They are at least as much about protracted loneliness, loss of meaningful work, feeling pressured and stressed in the absence of community.
“Protracted loneliness causes you to shut down socially, and to be more suspicious of any social contact,” Hari writes. “You become hypervigilant. You start to be more likely to take offense where none was intended, and to be afraid of strangers. You start to be afraid of the very thing you need most.”
This sounds like a pretty good summary of American politics in 2018.
I keep coming back to this topic because the chief struggle of the day is sociological and psychological, not ideological or economic. The substrate layer of American society — the network of relationships and connection and trust that everything else relies upon — is failing. And the results are as bloody as any war.
Maybe it’s time we began to see this as a war."
- David Brooks, "The New Cold War"Partner with Me at Holy Spirit Renewal Ministries!
|
Saturday, October 27, 2018
Wisdom
Me, climbing the big dune at Warren Dunes State Park (Michigan) |
I am beginning my day by opening up the Bible to Proverbs. And then, I am currently reading Luke. I slow-cook in these biblical books. They situate my heart on the right track.
Proverbs contains much wisdom. I don't think it wise to claim to be wise. Yet, as a philosopher, I have read a lot of the world's wisdom literature. This is what philosophers do. The word "philosophy" means "the love of wisdom" (philo-sophia). So, I have read Plato and Aristotle, Augustine and Kant, Descartes and Hume, Anselm and Aquinas, the Buddha and Confucius, the Upanishads and the Koran, Nietzsche and Kierkegaard, Camus and Sartre, Russell and Wittgenstein, Foucault and Derrida, Merton and Nouwen, and others. I read philosophy when driving the car. It is my bathroom reading. I study it. Scholars have taught me. I love wisdom. I treasure it. It has supreme value to me.
The love of wisdom is not a claim to be wise. But you won't be wise without having a foundational desire for wisdom. And study is one thing that helps me.
Have you seen those cartoons where someone seeking wisdom struggles to the top of a mountain to ask a white-bearded man with long grey hair a question? The book of Proverbs lies open on the pinnacle. God meets me, on the mountain, every morning.
"Above all else," I am told, "get wisdom."
Above everything else? Above money? Above fame? Above beauty? Above possessions? Yes. To understand this is to be wise. To think otherwise is to be an ordinary fool.
This morning I'm after some more wisdom. I collect it like diamonds, and mount them in my journal. I polish them by reading, and re-reading.
I am reading Proverbs in Eugene Peterson's The Message. Peterson writes a beautiful introduction to Proverbs on its core theme.
Wisdom is different from knowledge. Wisdom may contain knowledge; knowledge may have no wisdom. Peterson writes:
"“Wisdom” is the biblical term for this on-earth-as-it-is-in-heaven everyday living. Wisdom is the art of living skillfully in whatever actual conditions we find ourselves. It has virtually nothing to do with information as such, with knowledge as such." (Peterson, The Message Remix 2.0: The Bible In Contemporary Language, p. 870)
A college degree does not guarantee wisdom.
Peterson writes:
- Wisdom has to do with becoming skillful in honoring our parents and raising our children,
- handling our money
- and conducting our sexual lives,
- going to work
- and exercising leadership,
- using words well
- and treating friends kindly,
- eating and drinking healthily,
- cultivating emotions within ourselves and attitudes toward others that make for peace.
- Threaded through all these items is the insistence that the way we think of and respond to God is the most practical thing we do. In matters of everyday practicality, nothing, absolutely nothing, takes precedence over God. (Ib.)
"These are the wise sayings of Solomon, David's son, Israel's king -
written down so we'll know how to live well and right,
to understand what life means and where it's going."
- Proverbs 1:1
***
Friday, October 26, 2018
God's Kingdom Replaces Honor/Shame Hierarchies
I bought these flowers for Linda |
In Luke 1 Mary sings a song.
“My soul glorifies the Lord
47 and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,
48 for he has been mindful
of the humble state of his servant.
From now on all generations will call me blessed,
49 for the Mighty One has done great things for me—
holy is his name.
50 His mercy extends to those who fear him,
from generation to generation.
51 He has performed mighty deeds with his arm;
he has scattered those who are proud in their inmost thoughts.
52 He has brought down rulers from their thrones
but has lifted up the humble.
53 He has filled the hungry with good things
but has sent the rich away empty.
54 He has helped his servant Israel,
remembering to be merciful
55 to Abraham and his descendants forever,
just as he promised our ancestors.”
I have highlighted in bold the verses that invert the ungodly honor/shame hierarchies of the world. These verses also subvert, they undermine, godless ideas of status and power.
New Testament theologian Joel Green writes:
“The social setting to which we are introduced in Luke 1:5-2:52 is one in which issues of social status and social stratification are paramount. This is not to say that Luke is especially concerned with economic class – for example, as a function of one’s relative income or standard of living, or as related to one’s relationship to the means of production (as in Marxism). Such matters of post-industrial society have little meaning in Greco-Roman antiquity. Rather, Luke’s social world was defined around power and privilege, and is measured by a complex of phenomena – religious purity, family heritage, land ownership (for nonpriests), vocation, ethnicity, gender, education, and age.” (Green, The Gospel of Luke, pp. 59-60. Only $2.99 right now for Kindle - crazy!)
Green uses the following diagram to illustrate the prevailing honor/shame hierarchy during the time of Jesus.
“The social setting to which we are introduced in Luke 1:5-2:52 is one in which issues of social status and social stratification are paramount. This is not to say that Luke is especially concerned with economic class – for example, as a function of one’s relative income or standard of living, or as related to one’s relationship to the means of production (as in Marxism). Such matters of post-industrial society have little meaning in Greco-Roman antiquity. Rather, Luke’s social world was defined around power and privilege, and is measured by a complex of phenomena – religious purity, family heritage, land ownership (for nonpriests), vocation, ethnicity, gender, education, and age.” (Green, The Gospel of Luke, pp. 59-60. Only $2.99 right now for Kindle - crazy!)
Green uses the following diagram to illustrate the prevailing honor/shame hierarchy during the time of Jesus.
On the bottom of the pecking order are the "expendables." Like Mary, the mother of Jesus. Like Jesus himself. This is the revolutionary nature of the Incarnation. Christ gave up equality with God and became, on the "power and privilege" scale, a social "nothing" (no power; no privilege; no honor; all shame).
The Roman leaders and Jewish religious establishment understood this; viz., that this man Jesus of No-town (Nazareth) is a bottom-feeding None-person. I would love to have a video of the looks on their faces when Jesus goes about healing and delivering people, claiming to be the promised Messiah, and drawing crowds.
I'd love to have an audio recording of when, in John 8:25, someone asked Jesus, "Who... are... you... anyway?"
Jesus has not come to play status games on the honor/shame hierarchy, but to abolish it ("neither slave nor free, Jew nor Greek, male nor female").
***
My two books are:
My two books are:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)