Tuesday, November 9, 2010

A Great Encouragement for Difficult Times

These past two months have been a wonderful season for us. We have a new house, Beacon Hill is going really well, and we are seeing a lot of maturity in our children. But the Lord has tempered this with some really difficult providence. Two of my mentors have an aggressive form of cancer. One is my grandmother and one is a dear friend. They both have granddaughters named after them. They both are amazing and I cannot even imagine the world without them.

I have been slowly reading through The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment by puritan pastor Jeremiah Burroughs. I read about two pages per day--it is that rich. Today I read the following:

It is the way of God to work by contraries, to turn the greatest evil into the greatest good. To grant great good after great evil is one thing, and to turn great evil into the greatest good is another, and yet that is God's way: the greatest good that God intends for his people, he many times works out of the greatest evil, the greatest light is brought out of the greatest darkness. I remember, Luther has a striking expression for this: he says, 'It is the way of God: he humbles that he might exalt, he kills that he might make alive, he confounds that he might glorify.' This is the way of God, he says, but every one does not understand it. This is the art of arts, and the science of sciences, the knowledge of knowledges, to understand this, that God when he will bring life, brings it out of death, he brings joy out of sorrow, and he brings prosperity out of adversity, yea and many times brings grace out of sin, that is, makes use of the sin to work furtherance of grace. It is the way of God to bring all good out of evil, not only to overcome the evil, but to make the evil work toward the good.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

A Gem From John Piper

"I confess that I have gotten very excited about being a father as I have been thinking this week about what a family is and what it's for in God's great design for the world. I get excited when I think of the family as:

A breeding ground for children who hope in the triumph of God,

or when I think of it as

A training school for teaching what is true and false about what the world is really coming to

or when I think of it as

A boot camp for fitting out young soldiers of Christ for the greatest combat of the world,

or when I think of it as

A fortress for protection

or

A hospital for healing,

A supply depot for replenishing the troops,

or

A retreat center for R and R,

and I get especially excited when I think of the family as

A launching pad for missiles of missionary zeal aimed at the unreached peoples of the world."

--John Piper

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

The Christian's Joyful Duty of Storytelling

The conservatives want to keep the truth of the propositions, unencumbered by any troublesome questions about whether it actually happened or not But when we separate them like this, they both die. Liberals love story, but they cannot tell it any more because they have gutted it. Conservatives love abstracted truths, but they can't defend them anymore because truth without a body has no immune system.

We must meditate on the example given to us in the book God gave to us. There we learn to honor the power of the narrative, throughout the course of much of both the Old and New Testaments. And the preeminent preacher and teacher was, of course, our Lord Jesus. And how did he teach? The answer is that He taught overwhelmingly by means of parables--short stories. Why is this so rarely imitated?

We therefore have a responsibility (as Christians seeking to be faithful to God and His holy Word) to learn how to tell stories. We must do this so that we can repeat the story, for those who have not yet heard it. And we must also do this so that we can tell lesser stories, stories that revolve around the great story, and which derive their glory from it.

--Douglas Wilson