Wednesday, July 30, 2008

"Only one life, 'twill soon be past,
Only what's done for Christ will last.

We need to always keep eternity in our minds. Don't be so distracted by the affairs of this world that you forget that you will live into eternity and this life on earth is just a dot in time. I know this is hard to truly comprehend - at least it is for me - but always evaluate what you are doing in the light of eternity. Work and school are important, but it is your relationship to the Lord and to his people and those who don't yet know Him that is truly important and that is where you want to invest you efforts. God has made us to glorify and enjoy Him. Enjoy Him through his creation, including those whom you love, and glorify Him by your words and deeds.

Monday, July 14, 2008

good quote

The matter is quite simple. The Bible is very easy to understand. But we Christians are a bunch of scheming swindlers. We pretend to be unable to understand it because we know very well that the minute we understand we are obliged to act accordingly. Take any words in the New Testament and forget everything except pledging yourself to act accordingly. My God, you will say, if I do that my whole life will be ruined. Herein lies the real place of Christian scholarship. Christian scholarship is the Church’s prodigious invention to defend itself against the Bible, to ensure that we can continue to be good Christians without the Bible coming too close. Dreadful it is to fall into the hands of the living God. Yes, it is even dreadful to be alone with the New Testament.
- Soren Kierkegaard

Christmas 1993

I came across this list of Christmas gifts from 1993 - we had just moved to Lubbock in November. I thought you'd have fun looking at it.

Rob - Bike, sweatshirt, Bible study book, piano books, computer game from William, bike speedometer from Michael and camera from G&G. Stocking - clay, mechanical pencils (of course, also orange, apple and candy!)
Michael - Nintendo, Joshua game, Jeopardy game, hat, Bible study book, Batman game from Rob and William. Stocking - Jungle Book, magnifier
William - Carmen San Diego, Outburst, Quiz Whiz, knife, hat, Bible study book, pano book, PJs, Lego, beanbags, gun from Michael, stuffed animal from Rob. Stocking - history activity book
Daddy - shirt, belt, Clarion Ledger subscription, computer Bible, calendar from Michael, wallet from Rob. Stocking - pen, poem, coupon book
Mom - Bible, jacket, tablecloth, cross-stitch book, poem, turtleneck from Michael, earrings from Rob, calendar from William. Stocking - razor, lipstick, spatula
For our Christmas dinner we had turkey, mashed potatoes, gravy, dressing broccoli casserole, crescent rolls, jello with fruit cocktail, cranberries, pound cake with ambrosia.

Doesn't sound too lavish, but we had a happy day. I probably didn't list garage sale stuff - or maybe I hadn't started that yet!

Sunday, July 6, 2008

You might be emergent if:

In the book, DeYoung gives a long list of things that might make you emergent. He says a little later, "Don't assume we dislike all things emergent. The longer sentence (which I'm going to quote) describes us in some ways too." So I thought it would be fun to see how emergent we are. I'm going to type in the long quote first. Then I will add a comment by copying the quote and highlighting the things I have read, like, etc. Then each of you do that too, when you have time.
So here is the sentences:
"You might be an emergent Christian: if you listen to U2, Moby, and Johnny Cash's Hurt (sometimes in church), use sermon illustrations from The Sopranos, drink lattes in the afternoon and Guinness in the evenings, and always use a Mac; if your reading list consists primarily of Stanley Hauerwas, Henri Nouwen, N.T. Wright, Stan Grenz, Dallas Willard, Brenning Manning, Jim Wallis, Frederick Buechner, David Bosch, John Howard Yoder, Wendell Berry, Nancy Murphy, John Franke, Walkter Winks and Lesslie Newbigin (not to mention McLaren, Paggis, Bell, etc.) and your sparring partners include D.A. Carson, John Calvin, Martyn Lloyd-Jones, and Wayne Grudem; if your idea of quintessential Christian discipleship is Mother Teresa, Martin Luther King, Jr., Nelson Mandela, or Desmond Tutu; if you don't like George W. Bush or institutions or big business or capitalism or Left Behind Christianity; if your political concerns are poverty, AIDS, imperialism, war-mongering, CEO salaries, consumerism, global warming, racism, and oppression and not so much abortion and gay marriage; if you are into bohemian, goth, rave, or indie; if you talk about the myth of redemptive violence and the myth of certainty; if you lie awake at night having nightmares about all the ways modernism has ruined your life; if you love the Bible as a beautiful, inspiring collection of works that lead us into the mystery of God but is not inerrant; if you search for truth but aren't sure it can be found; if you've ever been to a church with prayer labyrinths, candles, Play-Doh, chalk-drawings, couches, or beanbags (your youth group doesn't count); if you loathe words like, linear, propositonal, rational, machine, and hierarchy and use words like ancient-future, jazz, mosaic, matrix, missional, vintage, and dance; if you grew up in a very conservative Christian home that in retrospect seems legalistic, naive, and rigid; if you support women in all levels of ministry, prioritize urban over suburban, and like your theology narrative instead of systematic; if you disbelieve in any sacred-secular divide; if you want to be the church and not just go to church; if you long for a community that is relational, tribal, and primal like a river or a garden; if you believe doctrine gets in the way of an interactive relationship with Jesus; if you believe who goes to hell is no one's business and no one may be there anyway; if you believe salvation has a little to do with atoning for guilt and a lot to do with bringing the whole creation back in shalom with its Maker; if you believe following Jesus is not believing the right things but living the right way; if it really bugs you when people talk about going to heaven instead of heaven coming to us; if you disdain monological, didactic preaching; if you use the word "story" in all your propositions about postmodernism - if all or most of this tortuously long sentence describes you, then you might be an emergent Christian."

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Why We're Not Emergent

Michael scoffed at this book for being one sided, but actually it is a very fair treatment of the emergent movement. I have become more and more familiar with things emergent and have read and like a lot of the authors favored by the movement - Nouwen, Buechner, Miller (Blue Like Jazz). However, I have not read anything by the leaders of the movement, but have seen a number of DVDs by Rob Bell. This book, however, quotes them extensively. The principal author is very respectful of the leaders of the movement, but disagrees with some of their basic tenets. If you're interested, I'll write what I have learned.
Love, Mom

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

I'm reading a book about trying to be conscious of God every moment of the day. It is a spiritual discipline and seems quite impossible. I've failed completely today, but tomorrow is another day!
Love, Mom