Tuesday, February 14

Point Man


Point Man
Steve Farrar    
Here again I jot down the main points of a book that will wake us up.   I wish I had read this right about the time I got married. That said, there is plenty here for the man without a family.  My main takeaway was the importance of devotional time, really meditating on that fellowship with God such that I am changed.  I also felt the need to get others more involved in my life….still looking for a  way for that to come about.
1.     Point man on patrol:  War has been declared on the family, and like the leader of a small platoon, what you say and do will determine whether your family members will live or die. Stan has two specific  goals in his war on the family:
·       Strategy #1) To effectively alienate and sever a husband’s relationship with his wife (physical or emotional).
·       Strategy #2) To effectively alienate and sever a father’s relationship with his children.  Overall, Satan is trying to neutralize the the man of the family. The problem with “Quality time” is that you never know when quality time is going to show up.   
2.     Save the boys.  “A boy is the only thing that God can use to make a man.” (Cal Farley).  The premise here is that fathering as a craft has been removed from an ancient pattern of Fathers “apprenticing” their sons starting around age 7.  Largely this has been accomplished by the industrial revolution, where fathers have left the home to work in factories instead of taking their sons to work. LESS TIME=LESS INFLUENCE.  ERROR increases with distance.  Jonathan Edwards left a multi-generational impact through his focus on his boys. 
3.     Real Men Don’t.  The title says it all.  Real men don’t mess around with women who are not their wives.  They may listen, and provide comfort, but….”If you and your wife are struggling, this woman probably will be more understanding than your wife.  But why is she more understanding?  I hate to be the one who breaks the news, but its probably because she doesn’t know you very well.  J   Roger Staubach answered a rough question by saying I’m sure I’m as sexually active as Joe [Namath], The difference is that all of mine is with one woman.
4.     A one-woman kind of man.  Clearly, since I am not married, this chapter was a little tough to read, but the same thoughts apply..”I made a covenant with my eyes not to look lustfully at a girl (Job 31:1).  CS. Lewis wrote, “If you look upon ham and eggs and lust, you have already committed breakfast in your heart”.  A one-woman kind of man must have a predetermined plan fixed in his mind so he can withstand the sneak attacks of the enemy.  We never know when we are going to be tempted with our eyes.”  Franklin Jones wrote, “What makes resisting temptation difficult for many people is they don’t want to discourage it completely.”  But we should “demolish” and “take captive” every thought  (2Cor 10:3-5). A great example was learning to dribble left-handed, awkward until practice made perfect.
5.     Anorexic Men and Bulimic cousins.  This chapter describes those of us who either refuse to read God’s word, or vomit it up rather than put it into practice.  In Fact the strategy #3 of satan is to effectively sever and alienate a man from the spiritual disciplines that will keep him it and effective for spiritual battle.  With regard to Bulimia, the opposite of ignorance is not knowledge, but obedience.  The antidote is meditation; it is to the soul what digestion is to the body. Several suggestions, the one that stood out was start a scripture memory program, small accountability groups, with weekly assignments throughout the week.  Roots of a tree are 3x the size of the crown.
6.     Aerobic kneeling: Two mistakes are 1) Scripture without prayer or 2) prayer without scripture.
·       Plan a time
·       Plan a place
·       Make a list of issues to pray about
·       Begin with scripture
·       Make yourself accountable to someone.    
7.     Husband and wife teamwork in the marriage cockpit.  Clearly this is something that might have helped me when I was married.  A warning to the wife to be the submissive to the quarterback, but a husband who is loving rather than authoritarian.  He loves his wife with understanding, the idea of insight and tactfulness). Verbal praise and mutual accountability.
8.     Birth of a tangent- questioning why parents don’t have children 
9.     How to raise masculine sons and feminine daughters
·       Do no embitter, provoke to anger exasperate (Ephesians 6:4)
·       Be a compass, showing by example the life of Christ
·       Balancing tenderness and firmness
10.  Telling your kids what you don’t want to tell them:  The premise here is that by the age of 7 to 8, its about time to start telling them about the birds and the bees, and if you don’t do it, some 8 or 9 year old will, setting the stage for all sorts of problems later in life.
·       Small questions deserve small answers
·       Big questions deserve big answers
·       Frank questions deserve frank answers
·       Be casual
·       Do not underestimate the power of a teachable moment
·       Let them know they can ask anything and get a straight answer
11.  Rock and Role model.  His attempt to sum the message of the book is this: you must be a rock for your family and you must be a role model. The fruit is muti-generational.

Tuesday, January 31

A quest for More

Want more...some key Life Questions here....



One of the most life-changing books I have read in the last couple years.  Ideas not so new, but so clear we cannot resist the invitation into a life meant for so much more....A few of my notes below on the chapters.

1. Transcendence:  You were meant for so much more, what is the big vision, Glory to your purpose? “There is a compelling tendency to forget who you are and what you are made for.”
What is the big thing that you are living for right now?


2. Have you exchanged more for less? Jesus came to rescue us to God glory, community glory, stewardship glory, truth glory.
What is the “less” that tends to capture your attention?


3. The quest for autonomy will always crush transcendence.


4. Kingdom: Where do you pursue the interests of the big kingdom? In exactly the place where you are tempted to pursue the little kingdom. Right where you live and work each day. Ask yourself, what makes your good day good? If true humanity is bound up in community with God and godly community with others, I will never experience it when all my eyes ever see is my own need.
What earth-bound treasures and anxiety-bound needs tend to control you and your responses to life?


5. Civilization: Enculturation of self? The little kingdom does not encourage a humble and accurate view of self, being more dominated by internal conversation than by God’s revelation.
In what ways do you try to get the people around you to follow the rules of your kingdom of self?


6. Costume: Fruit of the costume kingdom: lack of excitement and enthusiasm in the gospel. Are you barely able to get up in time to have a brief personal time of worship before the day? You become like the treasure you seek (Psalm 115:8). Someone who gets his meaning and identity from relationships will become driven by what people think of him, living in unending fear of man.
In everyday life tight now, where are you telling yourself that you are living for God, when you are really living for yourself?


7. Shrink: Sin shrinks the size of your care and concern to the contours of your life.
Has the energy of your life been expended in the narrow world of personal wants, needs, and concerns?


8. Center: Big Kingdom Life means living with Christ at the center of everything I think, desire, say and do. Romans 11:36, for From Him, and through Him and to Him are all things. You cannot be Christ Centered without being cross centered.
What tends to compete with Christ for the center of your world? Responsibility, order, relationships?


9. Death: You must die (deny yourself). Achievement, acceptance, appearance, and possessions may give you identity for a while, they will enslave you and disappoint you in the end. OR you deny yourself, take your cross and follow the Lord and begin to experience the transcendent humanity for which you were created.
In everyday situations and relationships, where are you finding it hard to deny yourself, take up your cross, and follow Christ?


10. Focus: You and I are always living to avoid what we dread. If we dread displeasing God more than anything else, because our hears have been captured by a deep, worshipful and loving awe of him, we will live in new ways. (p127)
What is the focus of your life’s’ energies and intentions? Knowing Him, pleasing man, being “productive”, fellowship, serving others.


11. Groaning: There should be, this side of eternity, a dissatisfaction in all of us with the way things are. Ungodliness is about my life being so dominated by desire for present pleasures that my heart will never stay inside of God’s boundaries.
What are the tings that make you groan? My family, my job, lack of depth in relationships, lack of momentum in the big kingdom


12. Jazz: Harmonious: suitable and fitting; existing together in correspondence with others. What makes great jazz work is that it is gloriously unpredictable and creative, while at the same time submitting itself to a set of rules. He has ordained not to play His music alone. Great jazz musicians are not just great players, they are great listeners, playing is always an interaction with what is going on around them.
Where in your life are you tempted to write your won music rather than making harmonious music with the king? My sons.


13. Forgiveness: Every time you ask for forgiveness you recognize the biggest problems you face in life are inside of you, not outside of you. Every time you ask for forgiveness, you make the Kingdom of God visible to others.
Do you find joy in the liberating lifestyle of seeking forgiveness?


14. Loneliness: Big Kingdom living is supposed to look like waiting for the love of your life to return, deepening your love, and preparing yourself for the reunion. The health of this relationship depends not on three or four big moments but on 10,000 little moments.
What are the “other lovers” in your life that compete with your love for Christ?


15. Sacrifice: When you hold everything in your life with open hands for His taking, you expand everything you touch to the size of His Kingdom.
Whose kingdom are you making sacrifices for right now?


16. Anger: Because we are not motivated by what God is trying to accomplish, our anger, and God’s anger do not get along very well. The anger of restoration refuses to condemn, but believes lost rebels can be rebuilt into the likeness of Jesus. He died so you would be angry with sin and the way it has harmed you and everyone around you. Godly anger propels us forward to look for ways to do good (Ephesians 4:2)


17. Hope: If your hope disappoints you, it is the wrong kind of hope. You see, hope in God never disappoints, precisely because its hope IN GOD. Everything else will disappoint eventually.
Where do You look for Hope?


18. Zack believes in…
 …the importance of place…sovereignly located
 …ministry as a lifestyle
 …the redemptive power of relationships
 …importance of hospitality, opening up his private world
 …living life with patience and perseverance

Saturday, January 28

Meditation: How deep are our roots?



The tree above is a picture from my back yard years ago.  For some reason, it never took, and was slowly dying.  We dug it up, and I was fascinated by the roots.  they were very developed, but not deep into the soil. 
  
Meditation is a word that usually brings images of eastern religion or yoga or other.  We label all these as foolishness idolatry (and rightly so), but not meditation. To ponder, to consider, to ruminate, to imagine, to pray.  These are acts of meditation.  Meditation is the active pursuit of truth, by denying external noise, fleeting desires, and surrendering our will and opinions to that of the Truth. How deep are our roots? I have added mediation to my new years resolutions, though I am not doing very well yet.


Hippocrates illustrated the challenge, here is wiki interpretation of the original :
The task is hugeLife is [too] short
The right time is like a razor blade...fleeting
The road to experience is fraught with hazards
To continuously accept reality and critical thought over hope and prejudice is taxing.  


the original from Hippocrates 
Art [is] long,
vitality [is] brief,
occasion precipitous,
experiment perilous,
judgment difficult.
This Wikipedia article found after the original Latin phrase was found in Matthew Henry commentary around Mark 4, the parable of the sower.  What great effort and reward results from listening, beholding, hearing....
"This parable is to teach you to be attentive to the word, and affected with it, that you may understand it. If ye receive not this, ye will not know how to use the key by which ye must be let into all the rest.’ ’ If we understand not the rules we are to observe in order to our profiting by the word, how shall we profit by any other rule?" 
The parable from Mark 4:4-9
Listen! Behold, a sower went out to sow.  And as he sowed, some seed fell along the path, and the birds came and devoured it. Other seed fell on rocky ground, where it did not have much soil, and immediately it sprang up, since it had no depth of soil. And when the sun rose, it was scorched, and since it had no root, it withered away.  Other seed fell among thorns, and the thorns grew up and choked it, and it yielded no grain.  And other seeds fell into good soil and produced grain, growing up and increasing and yielding thirtyfold and sixtyfold and a hundredfold.” And he said, “He who has ears to hear, let him hear.”




 

Saturday, January 7

....For I came not to call the righteous, but sinners.

"....For I came not to call the righteous, but sinners.” (Matthew 9:13 part) 

Am I righteous in my own eyes? Forgive me.
Do I see my sin? Help me.
Do I pursue the goals of my little kingdom instead of the expansive glory of Yours? You know I do.  Call me Lord. Speak to me. Today.

Your servant is listening. I surrender.



Sunday, December 25

The Pursuit of Holiness


[This blog is primarily written as part of my own reflection, meditation and as I grow older, my memory :).  As such I have no shame or self-promotion, nor do I mind if it helps others, although that is not my primary motive. As part of a group of men who are trying to grow deeper in their faith, I am reading through some books, and it seemed necessary that I jot down some notes. 

Having come out of a legalistic group that completely misunderstood grace, faith and salvation, the subject of “Holiness” is one that is often abused.  Since I knew and trusted the men that were reading with me, I was not reluctant to grow in my faith with them. ]


 

“Strive for peace with everyone and for holiness without which no one will see the Lord” Hebrews 12:14


At the end of the book, the author points the key benefit of Holiness:  Experiencing God’s Love.  More specifically, His love is not conditional on obedience, but our experience of it is, 1) in Fellowship with God (Ps 51:12)  2) Joy of obedience (Nehemiah 8:10) and 3) anticipation of our reward.  I wish I had read this first.

 The remaining 16 chapters focus on how we view obedience to God’s will, and some simple principles to keep in mind as we pursue that. In the end, I couldn’t find anything that troubled me from the standpoint of legalism, and on the contrary, found confirmation of a faith-based approach to Holiness led by the Holy Spirit, which is exactly where Holiness must come from. 

By far the most important message to me is this: Our spirit works with the Holy Spirit (not “either/or” but “BOTH/AND”).  “… for it is God who works in you to will and to act according to His good purpose” (Phil 2:13).  This begins to reconcile a much bigger question I have about the interplay between “free will” and God’s sovereignty.  My summary below picks other ideas from each chapter that were personally most impactful.  

Chapters 1-16
1.     Holiness is for you - Romans 6:14 <> Victory is a byproduct of obedience, God commands us not to sin.
2.     The Holiness of God – 1 Peter 1:15-16 <> Because God is holy, He hates sin.  Do we justify sin by saying “I am growing in this area” instead of owning it?
3.     Holiness is not an option – Hebrews 12:14 <> Holiness is a requirement for fellowship with God, well being, our service and our assurance.
4.     The Holiness of Christ – 2 Corintians 5:21 <> We are secure because of Christ “I have come to do your will”
5.     A change of Kingdoms – Romans 6:6-7 <>The potential of resisting sin is NOT the same as the Responsibility for resisting sin.  Slaves after Lincoln were used as an example, though they were legally free, not all of them took responsibility for their freedom, but continued to live like slaves.
6.     The battle for Holiness – Romans 7:21 <> Our efforts toward denying sin: focus on “affections” glorifying God.  This relies on the Holy Spirit to search our hearts, avoiding the twin pitfalls of morbid introspection and “missing the real issues in our lives.
7.     Help in the Daily Battle – Romans 6:11 <> God uses scripture AND the Holy Spirit AND prayer AND dependence to expose sin.  
8.     Obedience Not Victory – Romans 8:13 <>Obedience to the Spirit not Victory/Defeat by the enemy. It is our spirit working with the Holy Spirit (not either/or but BOTH/AND).  “for it is God who works in you to will and to act according to His good purpose” (Phil 2:13)
9.     Putting Sin to Death – Colossians 3:5 <> Mortify sin, Questions to ask yourself – “Is it helpful? An idol? Hurtful? Does it glorify God?  Saying no to sin makes it easier to say no next time.  These decisions must be made out of a conviction, a sense of obedience to God, not a judgment of others whose convictions are different.
10. The place of personal discipline – 1 Timothy 4:7 <> No such thing as instant godliness: Train yourself
11. Holiness in Body – 1Corintians 9:27 <> Plan before you approach Temptation
12. Holiness in Spirit – 2 Corinthians 7:1 <> Contentment is a function of (Trusting a sovereign God 1 Peter 2:23). Not revenge or retaliation
13. Holiness in our wills – Philippians 2:13 <>   The heart (Mind, Emotions, Will, Concience) is trained by TREASURING understanding
14. Habits of Holiness – Romans 6:19 <> Every sin reinforces the HABIT of sinning.  Repitition with the Holy Spirit in saying NO breaks the habit. 
15. Holiness and Faith – Hebrew 11:8 <> We need CONVICITON in necessity of obeying the revealed word of God and CONFIDENCE in His promises.
16. Holiness in an Unholy world – John 17:15 <>Our own holy life will serve as a sufficient rebuke.   Our interest in others is not in conduct but the need for Jesus as their savior.
17. The Joy of Holiness – Romans 14:17 <>  His love is not conditional on obedience, but our experience of it is.  1) Fellowship with God Ps 51:12, 2) Joy of obedience (Neh 8:10) and 3) anticipation of our reward.

The book is by far better than this summary.  Modern classic as Chuck Colson describes it.

Wednesday, December 21

Leap of Faith, Over and Over and Over again.

Brian Hall and his niece
Brian Boston starts a line....
  A picture you have seen before; a father, calling his child into a leap of faith. You might think that we put ourselves in this place where we have to jump, or He put us there for this reason.

Either way, you know the Father's heart here, He THRILLS at seeing the child jump!  Why?
  • ...to see a child to learn they CAN do something they are afraid of?
  • ...to enjoy the rush through His child?
  • ...does He relish the trust and faith expressed by the child who EXPECT's to be caught?
  • ...do fathers see the consequences of the FUN are actually contagious?
Anyone who has seen this watches the smallest children tremble in fear the first couple times. Then after 1 or two leaps, he starts to smile. Then, if there are other children nearby, a line will form and they will not stop taking leaps of faith. Fathers LOVE this! (I suspect mothers do too, though they are seen more prominently in the comforting moments when things don't go quite as expected :)

All this came to mind this morning as I read 2nd Peter, and we are reminded "The Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials" 2:9. He is patient, and therefore we should remain PATIENT, at PEACE and STABLE in the knowledge that "His divine power has granted to us all things that pertain to life and godliness through the knowledge of him who called us to his own glory and excellence, by which he has granted to us his great and precious promises, so that through them you may become partakers of the the divine nature..." v1:3 ff.

The last week has been unusually painful for me at home with my boys, inn the workplace and even with people who I am trying to fellowship with.  I know He is calling me back to this place, to RELY on, TRUST in and SMILE with Him.

Where does the child look?  Right into the Father's eyes!!  In the words of my dear brother Hank Mercier  "Come and enjoy God with us!" Partake.



Misty Edwards
Simple Devotion lyrics

Over and over and over and over again
I will stir up my soul to lay hold of You
Over and over and over and over again
I will stir up my soul to lay hold of
That which I cannot comprehend
Over and over and over and over again
Over and over and over and over again

And then I'll just lean into sovereignty
I'll embrace a mystery
And I'll just rest in You
As I bathe in truth
Over and over and over and over again
This is my simple devotion
My walk of faith, day by day
Over and over and over and over again

And then I hear You say
As You gaze over the balcony of heaven
I hear You say as You peer through the lattice of time
I hear You say as You stand in heaven
I hear You say as You rejoice over me
"O Angels! O Angels! Look and see!
Through that dark night of faith
She is gazing at Me!
O Angels! O Angels! Look and see!
Through that cloud of unknowing
She's gazing at Me!
And You have ravished My heart
My sister, My bride
With one glance of your eye!"
Over and over and over and over again..."