Living In Faith
Living In Faith

Living In Faith

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A Prayer to Be Thirsty for God - Your Daily Prayer - June 22
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A Prayer to Be Thirsty for God - Your Daily Prayer - June 22

Even when you’re not able to hear from God well, you still have a natural thirst for God in your soul.

Your Kids Need to Know About Jonathan Edwards
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Your Kids Need to Know About Jonathan Edwards

My first impression of Jonathan Edwards wasn’t good. I lived for years with the distorted (and sadly common) perspective I received from a high school history textbook. It seemed like the only thing Edwards had done was preach “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.” In college, an older student twisted my arm to read John Piper, where I came across quotes from Edwards. Those quotes were surprisingly bright and warm compared to the dark and morose figure I expected. But even that wasn’t enough to get me to read Edwards right away. I assumed these glimpses must be exceptions and that his books would be inaccessible and filled with fire and brimstone. It’s tragic how common textbooks often misrepresent one of the greatest minds and hearts in American history. My kids deserve a better introduction to Edwards. Your kids do too. For years, that wrong first impression held me back from feeding on the banquet of God-centered, Christ-adoring food spread out in the works of Jonathan Edwards. The Boy Who Lived—for Jesus American history is on our minds this summer as we celebrate our nation’s 250th anniversary. As we teach our children about George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Benjamin Franklin, let’s not forget other significant figures in our history. Edwards’s theological and evangelistic work was as important for the formation of the United States as the political philosophies of other great leaders. Textbooks often underplay the key role Edwards played in the First Great Awakening and how revival prepared American minds and hearts for the later Revolution. And we see in him, unlike in many of our nation’s founders, a manifest love of Jesus and the Christian Scriptures. We don’t have to guess what Edwards thought on the matters of greatest importance. Here are a few lessons I want my kids to learn from Edwards’s life and ministry. 1. God speaks in his Word and world. Even before he became a great student and preacher of God’s Word, the boy Edwards learned to study God’s world. Now, let’s not minimize how important it is to learn about God from his own mouth as revealed in his Word. That he has spoken and still speaks in his Word by his Spirit is a marvel worth celebrating all our days. We don’t have to guess what Edwards thought on the matters of greatest importance. Yet God means for his Book to go along with what we see and learn of him from his world. The heavens too are telling of his glory (Ps. 19:1). Edwards learned about God through his world by spending extended time outdoors, carefully observing creation, trying to figure out how it works and what our world teaches us about the God who made it. Notably, Edwards had a special fascination with spiders. Rather than recoiling from them like many of us, he was curious about them. He wanted to gather all the knowledge he could about them, because he knew that their Creator made everything with purpose. 2. God doesn’t have grandchildren. Edwards had 10 sisters and no brothers, which I’m sure made for an unusual childhood. But the most significant detail about his growing up is that he was raised in a Christian home. His father was a pastor and was deeply concerned that all who heard his preaching would personally repent of their sin and come to know themselves as God’s adopted sons through faith. As a teenager, Edwards heard this loud and clear and came to have a deep and abiding concern for his own soul and personal faith. He didn’t presume on the faith of his parents but struggled (at times intensely) to confirm that his faith was his own and genuine. Edwards wasn’t content to play “grandchild” of God because his parents were Christians. He wanted to experience the true faith that made him a child of God. In time, and through much agony, he came to recognize he was securely God’s own. 3. We don’t have to choose between thinking and feeling. When I first encountered Edwards, I assumed his great intellect must mean he was handicapped in heart. My high school textbook encouraged that impression. However, when I read Edwards myself, especially his sermons, I saw how a mind for God and a heart for Jesus go hand in hand. They’re mutually reinforcing. A great mind, rightly employed, serves a great heart for the God who made all things and the Son he sent to rescue us from our sins. Edwards both loved the person of Jesus and loved to study God’s words in the Bible. His was one of the greatest minds of his time, and of American history. Yet with such an exacting intellect, he was still awed by Jesus and the Christian Scriptures. Edwards’s writings are filled with praise for the greatness and sweetness of knowing Jesus. 4. We can appreciate flawed heroes. None of the heroes we encounter in church history or the pages of Scripture is perfect—except for one. Edwards made many mistakes as a pastor. One of them was going at the work of ministry alone for so long without a team of fellow pastors to check his blind spots and smooth off his rough edges. Edwards’s writings are filled with praise for the greatness and sweetness of knowing Jesus. More gravely, like many in his day, he was blind to the evils of slavery. At times, he acted unwisely in complex social situations. Edwards was a sinner, and his sin hurt others deeply. But our heroes can be flawed if they own it and have a Hero in Jesus. In fact, the great Hero and the imperfect heroes of history work together to teach our children twin truths. First, that they’re flawed and sinful and need forgiveness. And second, that in Jesus, God has provided the only Hero who could rescue us from our sin. Only because of Jesus can we be counted as righteous before God or empowered by the Holy Spirit to do good for others. We aren’t the first generation to walk in Jesus’s wake. Edwards and other heroes like him can help us, and our kids, follow the great Hero. And the earlier we start them, the better.

On My Shelf: Life and Books with Kevin Burrell
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On My Shelf: Life and Books with Kevin Burrell

On My Shelf helps you get to know various writers through a behind-the-scenes glimpse into their lives as readers. I asked Kevin Burrell—pastor of StoneBridge Church Community in Charlotte, North Carolina, and author of Considering Sparrows: What Birds Teach Us About Who We Are, Where We’re Going, and the Joy of Following Jesus—about what’s on his bedside table, his favorite fiction, the books he regularly revisits, and more. What’s on your nightstand right now? It might be best to divide my book-wielding furniture into three places: the nightstand, the home study nook, and the church office end table. It doesn’t always break down this easily, but I’ve realized that my reading unintentionally seems to partition itself by location. The nightstand is mostly adorned with classic novels (and, admittedly, the Kindle app, so I can read with the lights off and not disturb my wife). Last month I finished Steinbeck’s East of Eden. As a finicky 17-year-old, I had written off Steinbeck after a bad experience with The Grapes of Wrath. But East of Eden is a masterpiece, and it’s caused me to give a second chance to other authors I cavalierly dismissed as a pompous teen (I’m currently rereading Dickens’s Great Expectations). I also devoured Malcolm Guite’s new book Galahad and the Grail, the first in a four-part series on the tales of King Arthur and Camelot. It’s a massive epic narrative poem that’s so rhythmic that it begs to be read out loud. Seriously, I dare you not to read it out loud. It’s gorgeous, uplifting, inspiringly illustrated, and gospel-minded in the way that a tale of spiritual pilgrimage was meant to be. We should celebrate that books like this are still being written out into the world. The home study nook tends to be the place for Christian growth books, though addictive books like Galahad often find their way downstairs. Recent visitors to this nook have included Seth Lewis’s The Language of Rivers and Stars, a thoughtful walk through the language of creation as translated by the Rosetta Stone of God’s Word; Russ Ramsey’s Rembrandt Is In the Wind and Van Gogh Has a Broken Heart, which utilize Ramsey’s love of art to ponder spiritual truths and the weight of the human condition; and Andrew Osenga’s How to Remember: Forgotten Pathways to an Authentic Faith, which challenges our modern approaches to music, liturgy, and personal worship. Lastly, there’s the church office end table, reserved for the ministry-pertinent reading that shapes my preaching and leadership. We’re working through Exodus right now, so I’m helpfully informed by Michael Morales’s Exodus Old and New (thematically associating the exile and exodus of Israel with that of the Christian pilgrim) and Philip Ryken’s gold-mine commentary from the Preaching the Word series. These books tend to follow me around in my backpack, as weighty reminders that Sunday’s coming. Oh, and did I mention Galahad and the Grail? What are your favorite fiction books? I’m solidly on the Theo of Golden bandwagon; rarely does a week go by without me recommending it to someone. But most of my favorites lean further back. Les Misérables has been at the top of my list for a long time. I love to read and reread Tolkien and Lewis, especially The Great Divorce, Perelandra, and The Lord of the Rings (I’m currently savoring it for the fifth time). And then there’s the world of Anniera captured in Andrew Peterson’s Wingfeather Saga, a four-volume series that’s on par with Narnia and Middle-earth, at least in my estimation. What biographies or autobiographies have most influenced you and why? I lean in the direction of the survival/adventure biographies. So, for instance, Laura Hillenbrand’s Unbroken haunts me regularly; as a story of horrifying injustice and inspiring forgiveness, it confronts my petty reluctances to turn the other cheek. Alfred Lansing’s Endurance, my favorite adventure bio, is a treasure trove of sermon illustrations, and I’m most struck by Ernest Shackleton’s preservation of his entire crew at great personal risk. And aside from the survival stories, I love the genius of Daniel Nayeri’s Everything Sad Is Untrue, an autobiographical memoir written in novel form from the point of view of the author’s 13-year-old self, recounting the personal ripple effects of his Iranian mother’s unlawful conversion to Christianity. What are some books you regularly reread and why? I used to consider life too short to read the same book twice. But the older I get, the more I want my heart stirred by the sorts of works that resonated deeply once upon a time. I’ve mentioned several already, mostly Tolkien and Lewis. But sometimes I pull a book off the shelf just to reread a favorite scene, like Les Misérables—to replay the heart-soaring emotions of Valjean rescuing Cosette from the Thénardiers. Or The Warden and the Wolf King (the last volume of The Wingfeather Saga), just to let the renaming of the Fangs stir the hope of redemption in my soul all over again. I used to consider life too short to read the same book twice. But the older I get, the more I want my heart stirred by the sorts of works that resonated deeply once upon a time. Valley of Vision: A Collection of Puritan Prayers and Devotions has been a faithful friend. My prayers often meander in the same circles, and weighty things don’t get prayed for because I would never have thought to pray them. Eugene Peterson said that in prayer, the well is deep and we don’t have a good enough bucket. The prayers of the Puritans give me a better bucket to draw deeper from the well. The Every Moment Holy series does the same; these thoughtful prayers and liturgies find the holy in the ordinary. And while describing them on the surface might sound trite or humorous (like the two liturgies for changing a diaper, or the one for brewing morning coffee), each prayer is actually a profound means of seeing the Lord faithfully at work in the space between. What books have most profoundly shaped how you serve and lead others for the sake of the gospel? In pastoral ministry, I prefer the sorts of books that hit you upside the head with a gracious two-by-four. Paul Tripp’s Dangerous Calling and Lead have both done that to me: the former in wrestling down ministry pride and the latter in pursuing authentic gospel leadership communities. I’ve led would-be seminarians through Zack Eswine’s The Imperfect Pastor, which offers sweet freedom from the pastoral pressure of being all things to all people all the time everywhere. Lastly, I discovered Eugene Peterson’s pastoral books Working the Angles and Under the Unpredictable Plant early in ministry, and they’ve stayed with me, shaping pastoral priorities and calling me back from the siren sounds of the ship to Tarshish. What’s one book you wish every pastor would read? You Are What You Love by James K. A. Smith is a seriously important book for pastors. We are seminary-hardwired to convey orthodoxy—a ministry built on the convictions of didactic truth. As well we should. But although it’s true that often “[God’s] people are destroyed for a lack of knowledge” (Hos. 4:6), my pastoral experience over the years shows forth a lot more brokenness in people’s desires than in their knowledge base. They know their Bibles and their theology; they simply want other things more than they want Jesus. As we develop biblically literate people, we have to challenge their faulty feelings, not just their faulty thinking. Orthopathos, not just orthodoxy—Jesus as the more beautiful song to subdue our competing idols. That affects how we preach, disciple, and measure our ministry faithfulness. What’s your best piece of writing advice? Practice analogical thinking. In our pastoral team’s preaching development time, I always start us off with an exercise in sermon illustrations. As we develop biblically literate people, we have to challenge their faulty feelings, not just their faulty thinking. It involves two jars, both filled with scraps of paper: the first contains theological or biblical concepts, and the latter contains random objects, concepts, or scenes from ordinary life. Each of us draws a paper from each jar, and then—on the spot—launches into a sermon illustration that connects them. “How is the work of the Holy Spirit like a hair dryer?” “How is original sin like Mount St. Helens?” The result can be comparison, contrast, vignette, allegory, whatever—as long as it makes a salient point. As you can imagine, some are better than others, and we have some good laughs, but I believe the exercise stretches the way we write sermons. In the end, my book, Considering Sparrows, could be described as 16 chapters of extended sermon illustrations. “How does a hummingbird depict the transformative role of the church in the culture?” “How does a mockingbird picture the importance of modeling in discipleship?” Good analogies stick with people. What are you learning about life and following Jesus? Although I’m a slow learner, the Lord has me in a beautiful season right now, with a gracious daily sense of his nearness. This freshness hasn’t been a result of finding the right morning devotional or prayer prompts, although I do both. It’s been more about “the approach”; coming to him at the outset and confessing what I seek, “that I may dwell in the house of the LORD all the days of my life” including this one (Ps. 27:4), admitting my past-day failures to truly seek him with heart, soul, and mind, and then putting my trust in Jesus all over again: “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life” (John 6:68). I’ve been waking up more and more eager to be with him, so that we might rehearse these heart-truths together. I’m also learning to be less wounded by the criticisms of others. Honestly, the COVID-19 season probably beat a lot of that out of me. While it’s hard to lead through change, or to free my heart from man-pleasing, it’s much easier when you ultimately live your life before an audience of One. The Lord has been gracious to grow in me a more nonanxious presence in ministry. How have birds—and broadly the Book of Nature—helped you understand God’s Word and ways better? When I’m writing for my blog, Ornitheology, I’m usually flanked by two bookstacks: commentaries on one side and books about birds on the other. It’s a joy for me to bring these two worlds together, drawing analogies between the behavior of birds and the biblical truths they might represent. If it’s true that “the heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands” (Ps. 19:1, NIV), then we should be looking up more often. The Lord has aha moments for us there. Goldfinches teach me about God’s providential timing, killdeer show me how to take a hit for my church, and kookaburras teach me about the mirth of our Savior. Psalm 19 takes a whiplash turn midway through, to the new topic of the law of God—but it’s really not a new topic at all. God’s “invisible qualities” are revealed in part by “what has been made” (Rom. 1:20, NIV), and so looking at the creativity of the creation should lead us to ponder the character of the Creator. I’m always looking, watching for connections, considering sparrows.

Asterisks: A Future and a Hope - Homeword - June 22
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Asterisks: A Future and a Hope - Homeword - June 22

Although we may never see our life situations change drastically, how we respond to our challenges matters!

4 Ways to Thrive During Inflation
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4 Ways to Thrive During Inflation

Inflation is an inevitable reality, but you can thrive amidst rising costs by making intentional financial choices. Discover practical strategies to manage your budget effectively and cultivate a sense of financial peace in uncertain times.