If You Want Great Friends, Then You Need to Be a Great Friend: 3 steps you can take today to becoming an awesome friend.

Growing up we moved quiet a few times during my formative years.  It seems like I was always the new kid at school.  I guess with so many fresh starts that through the years I learned a lot about the kind of company you keep.

I used to think that as the new kid, I was the one in need of a friends.  But one day I realized that some people go their whole lives without ever discovering a true friend. I decided then and there that whatever other people might one day say about me, that the best thing they could say was that I was a true friend.

When I was sixteen I read an older edition of “How to Win Friends and Influence People” by Dale Carnegie (it’s still on my the shelf over my desk today).  To simplify and summarize the book, I learned that winning friends was really all about being a friend. So I set out to be a good friend to the people I already knew.  I asked questions, listened to stories, and shared positive insights into my friends’ lives.  It’s amazing what you will learn about people if you will just ask questions, listen and actually care.

Every year while I was in college, I looked around and made a list of people that needed a good friend.  I made it a point to find time to be in the Laundry mat, cafeteria, library,  etc. at the same time that they were in order to have an opportunity to ask good questions and listen.  At that point the caring part came pretty natural to me.  It’s hard not to care once you have heard someone’s story.

As the years have gone on, I’ve gotten close to several people and had several best friends.  I wish I were able to be closer to everyone.  Unfortunately geography and busy schedules have cause some friendships to wane in intensity.  (In reality you can only keep 3 or 4 good friendships going at once… with all my heart I wish it were more).

Being a good friend is a combination of things that is really just one thing… like pie, several ingredients make up the whole.  1. Ask good open ended questions and let your friend talk. 2. Listen and ask follow up questions like “how did you get involved in (whatever they are most passionate about).” 3. Care, genuinely care.  Your friends need to know that you care.

I hope all goes well on your pursuit to being a good friend.

How to Pray for Your Pastor

In the book of Malachi a scathing indictment is issued against priests who cut corners and received less than acceptable sacrifices from the people.  The priests were called to a special office of mediation between the people and God which made the charge against their office even more significant.  In Malachi 2:5-7  God reminds the priests about the covenant he had established with them through their fathers.

My covenant with him was one of life and peace, and I gave them to him. It was a covenant of fear, and he feared me. He stood in awe of my name. True instruction was in his mouth, and no wrong was found on his lips. He walked with me in peace and uprightness, and he turned many from iniquity. For the lips of a priest should guard knowledge, and people should seek instruction from his mouth, for he is the messenger of the LORD of hosts.
(Mal 2:5-7)

Pastors are not priests.  The pastoral ministry is significantly different than the ministry of Old Testament Priests especially considering the work of Christ.   Christ offered himself as the perfect sacrifice and now stands as the mediator between God and men (I Tim. 2:5, Hebrews 9:15, 12:24).   (This is one reason why many protestants stand so staunchly against the Roman Catholic notion of priest as mediators and mass as a perpetual offering of sacrifice.)

4 Ways to Pray for Your Pastor

Though Pastors are not priests, there are aspects of their ministry that parallel the duties of the priests in Malachi’s day.  Pastors are responsible to teach and oversee the body of the church. (Piper does a fantastic job of fleshing this out so I won’t belabor the point.)  It is from examining Malachi in this light that I have pulled application from the failure of the priest in Malachi into four ways to pray for pastors.

. . . . . . .

So here is how I pray for myself and the other pastors I know:

  1. To stand in fear and awe of God’s name
  2. True instruction to be found on his lips
  3. To walk with the Lord in peace and uprightness
  4. To turn people away from iniquity

Related Links:

The Best Book I have Read this year!

I get asked every once in a while, what’s the best book you have read lately.  Usually its a bit of a toss-up because as I have grown older and read more, I’ve become more skeptical of the books I read.  However, there is no toss-up here. Generous Justice: How God’s Grace Makes Us Just by Timothy Keller is by far the best book I have read in the last 365 days!  Go get a copy and read it!

Written with both the skeptic and believer in mind, Keller weaves a compelling argument for social justice.  While pointing out the inconsistencies of consumerism with the gospel imperative to “love your neighbor” he doesn’t get bogged down with emotional and baseless arguments.  Keller does an excellent job of navigating the scriptures, answering arguments and pointing a way forward.  This book is everything I had hoped Radical would be and so much more.

Keller takes a straight forward approach to the topic of social justice: He defines the term, explores the Old Testament, examines the teaching of Jesus, examines the ethic of “love your neighbor”, compels the reader into thought about social justice and then provides a way forward, with a view to all things beautiful in our Savior Jesus Christ…. Simply amazing.

I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the social justice debate.  Seriously, Christian, skeptic, conservative, liberal, etc.  Go get a copy and read it.  Want to test drive it before you borrow or buy?  Go by the www.gernerousjustice.com and download the first chapter to read for free!

The retail price of Generous Justice is $19.95 (Hardcover), I purchased my copy from  Amazon.com for just under $12.00. I gave it five stars and would give it more… Its just that good!

Disclosure of Material Connection: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

The Chasm By Randy Alcorn (a Review)

I really enjoyed reading The Chasm: A Journey to the Edge of Lifeby Randy Alcorn!  The book is a short allegory somewhat reminiscent of C. S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce and John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress .

The story has all the markings of a great book.  Alcorn takes the reader through a plane where the invisible becomes visible and emptiness of vain pursuits are seen before the journey’s end.  The main character Nick Seagrave  wanders a barren world between two greater worlds.  Below lies the a sea of wicked creatures bent on destruction and feasting on the flesh and misery of all those who reject the overtures of kindness from the king of a place called Charis.  Above there are mighty warriors of light thirsty only for the honor of their great and mighty king. Between these two worlds men travel many paths that all eventually lead to a great chasm, but only one road leads to the chasm in a way that provides hope.

I was greatly fascinated and encouraged by the Chasm.  I really like allegory for all that can be said in the matter of a few paragraphs.  Alcorn’s commentary on life, creation, fall, redemption and heaven are amazing.  His commentary on the allure and repulsion of sin is spot on.

The Chasm is a very powerful and engaging allegory.  I highly recommend it to anyone interested in allegory.  It also makes a great gift book.  The retail price of The Chasm is $14.99 (Hardcover), and is available around the web in places like Amazon.com for $10.11. I gave it five stars.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a copy of this book free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group as part of their Blogging for Books Program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

Are you frustrated with Christian Fellowship?

I ran across this convicting Bonhoeffer quote this week and thought I’d pass it along here.

If we do not give thanks daily for the Christian fellowship in which we have been placed, even where there is no great experience, no discoverable riches, but much weakness, small faith, and difficulty;  if on the contrary, we only keep complaining to God that everything is so paltry and petty, so far from what we expected, then we hinder God from letting our fellowship grow according to the measure and riches which are there for us all in Jesus Christ.

This applies in a special way to the complaints often heard from pastors and zealous members about their congregations.  A pastor should not complain about his congregation, certainly never to other people, but also not go God.  A congregation has not been entrusted to him in order that he should become its accuser before God and men.  When a person becomes alienated from a Christian community in which he has been placed and begins to raise complaints about it, he had better examine himself first to see whether the trouble is not due to his wish dream that should be shattered by God; and if this be the case, let him thank God for leading him into this predicament.  But if not, let him guard against ever becoming an accuser of the congregation before God.  Let him rather accuse himself  for his unbelief.  Let him pray God for an understanding of his own failure and his particular sin, and pray that he may not wrong his brethren.  Let him, in the consciousness of his own guilt, make intercession for his brethren.  Let him do what he is committed to do and thank God.

– Dietrich Bonhoeffer in Life Together

He Loves Us

Blessed beyond measure and led once again into worship this morning through this video.  All praise to God for his glorious love!  Are you in Christ today?

Random Musings of a Slightly Restless mind.

What Drive You? At first the question sounds kind of vague, undefined and without a clear context, but think for a moment. What drives you?  What compels you to move forward?  What gets you out of bed in the morning?  What force moves in you to act and when you act to act decisively?

Is it feeling?  Is it emotion?  Does your anger drive you?  Your sorrow?  Your joy and happiness?  Your sense of entitlement?  Your sense of justice?  Are you controlled by your attitude, your disposition of emotion toward a given circumstance or set of circumstances? Is it fear?  Do you judge the out come of your possible actions and choose the one with the least amount of pain?

Are your feelings always true?  Is it really “true” love or was is something else? Do you truly hate the person who stole your parking place?  Should you really fear all that you fear?  Should you hate all that you hate?  Are you wrong to rejoice in the suffering of others?  Should you really feel that way about your boss, your brother-in-law, your sister’s friend?  Should you really be depressed?  Should you be happy that your team is playing in the big game and not some other team?

Can you will your feelings to be different than they are?  Can you force yourself to love or must it be a blind force that exists outside of you and falls only when the cupid’s arrow strikes?  Is anger the same way? Who casts those arrows?  Should we then celebrate the random plucking of the cupid’s bow and revolt against the winged and diapered creature that must be cupid’s nemesis?  I think he hands out depression.  Should we then find something stronger than medication to fight these little creatures that trip us up so easily?  Who hurls the spears of peace, joy, and goodness?  I want those creatures to be my friends.

Who then is it that gives the thumbs up or thumbs down to the full expression of your emotions.  Do they control you or do you control them?  Are you truly responsible for your actions or are you seeking to blame the fates for your behavior?  You were tripped up by love? then it wasn’t love… It was a demon cupid and you are a fool.

Lets move on and get out of your head and into mine…

Why do some people feel different about a given situation than I do?  Should we not all feel the same?  Is it really a different situation or is it a different perspective? Does truth change with perspective or do we all perceive truth, just insufficiently and therefore hold a differing opinion?

Do all roads lead to God or is their one road that all must travel on if they would see God? One way seems right to one man, another way seems right to another man, does this then mean that both are right?  Could it mean that both are wrong?  Could it mean that one is right and one is wrong?  How would you know with enough confidence so as to act decisively?  Would you make that decision based on your emotion?  The way you feel about it?  Are we really back to trusting the celestial diapered toddler with a bow to determine truth? I think he has no claim here.

I say TRUTH.  Not a truth that has been formulated or postulated in my mind or the mind of another, but TRUTH that exists in and of itself.  TRUTH not feeling should be our guide.  Not just a guide for me, but a guide for all.  HE said, “I am the WAY, the TRUTH, and the LIFE, no man comes to the FATHER, but through ME.”  All roads then do not lead to God, but there is one road that all must travel if they would see God.

This road then is narrow, but not narrow minded.  For indeed he said, “Whosoever will!”  The gate is small, but the gate is open. I’m sorry that you are mistaken…It is not bigoted to say that their is only one way to God… It is LOVE. And not the kind dispensed by a chubby cherib in a diaper (who disposes of those?).  But real love. Not fallen and tripped into, but given deliberately, freely, sacrificially, for our good and for His glory!

Chasing Elephants: Wrestling with the Gray Areas of Life.

Chasing Elephants: Wrestling with the Gray Areas of Life by Brent Crowe is an amazingly thought-provoking book.  To be honest, when I first picked up the book I had a slight bias against the author because of my previous encounters hearing him in a youth pastor context in which I mistakenly understood him to be shallow and less than sincere… I was wrong (and never should have judged my brother so quickly).  Thankfully, I was able to move well past my personal biases and gain better perspective through reading this book.

Readers who pick up Chasing Elephants will find a well thought out, decently articulated, and challenging discussion on the nature of freedom in Christ.  The book is divided into two major portions: First, Brent  fleshes out what it means to have freedom and a frame-work from which to make decisions in the gray area’s of life.  Second, he applies the frame-work to challenging topics such as:  homosexuality, the internet, social drinking, entertainment and humanitarian efforts.

The only real draw back to the book was that throughout the book the author would make several sarcastic or side statements intended for humor.  While theses statements would add value in a public speaking venue, they did not come across the same in print and I found them to be detracting rather than enhancing the argument the author was trying to make.  Over all I really appreciated the book and highly recommend it.  The retail price is $14.99 (Paperback), and is available at a discount at  Amazon.com for $10.61. I gave it FOUR stars

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from NavPress as part of their Blogger Review Program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

 

Letters to Young Men: Let the Word be Your Authority

Dear Friend,

I hope this letter finds you doing well and continuing to grow in wisdom and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.  I have written you before and challenged you Treasure God’s WordI am confident that you won’t find this letter much different, yet I still find it necessary.

When I was a younger man at the age of seventeen my father challenged me with the advice that I now share with you.  Let God’s word be the final authority in your life.  When discussing issues, debating doctrine or discerning how you will behave, know there is no more important guide than the Bible. The Apostle Paul writes about this when he addresses Timothy:

All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work.

(2Timothy 3:16-17, ESV)

You cannot and should not form doctrinal stances and practices based solely on the opinions of others men. You must first and foremost regard the Scripture as authoritative.  The words of your father, your mentor, and even your friends do not carry the same weight as the Scriptures.

Here is what you should know.  People can be wrong.  Sometimes, we cloud our judgment with self-love or hatred of others.  We dull sharp edges of the Word and sharpen dull edges to suit our needs. Often not by design, but perhaps by preference.  We embrace what is comfortable.  We accept what is tradition.

I’m not asking you to doubt everything.  Descart started us down a path that in the end only reveals that the human mind is significantly able to doubt everything.  Instead I am asking you to test the genuineness of your doctrinal positions and motivations by the Scripture.  Be correctable, but let it be the Word that corrects, not merely the opinions of another man.

I am confident of this, that those who judge the Word and hold themselves above it, will in the end be judged by the Word and found to be false.  Those who come humbly to search the Word will in turn find that their own hearts have been searched by the Word of God.  Let the Word be you authority.

 

Your Friend,

Pastor Jonathan

The Next Christians (A Review)

The Next Christians: The Good News About the End of Christian America by Gabe Lyons is a very engaging and thought-provoking book.  This is Mr. Lyons second book, he is also the co-author of unChristian: What a New Generation Really Thinks about Christianity… and Why It Matters.  Though I have not read his first book, I was deeply impressed with the professionalism offered in the first four chapters of The Next Christians.  These formative few chapters provide key insights on the cultural shifts taking place in Western thought and practice.   Throughout the rest of the book, Mr. Lyons makes bold assertions concerning these current trends and their implications for a new movement within Christianity.

The author writes with a clear tone of optimism as he sets out the case for the decline of church influence in America and the advent of a movement back to the roots of historical Christianity.  He pens out six key characteristics that help define the new movement that he sees as becoming normative in the West: Provoked (not offended), Creators (not critics), Called (not employed), Grounded (not distracted), In Community (not alone), and Countercultural (not relevant).

Overall I was very impressed and appreciative of the book.  Mr. Lyons is a very excellent author and I enjoy reading his work.  The retail price of The Next Christians is $19.99 (Hardcover), and is available around the web in places like Amazon.com. I gave it five stars.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a copy of this book free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group as part of their Blogging for Books Program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”