Tuesday, September 30, 2008
TPC looking into buying facility...
Well, we are excited that our church, Trinity Presbyterian is considering the possibility of purchasing this church facility and land in Cahaba Heights. The Crosshaven Commuity Church stopped meeting last November and the building and property have been on the market since then. We're in the due diligence period on a contract to purchase...these are exciting times! We'll hope to be able to renovate it and use the existing building for a combination worship/fellowship space until a later time when we are able to build a new sanctuary. I'll keep you posted!
Thursday, September 25, 2008
...from The Meal Jesus Gave Us by N.T.Wright
"...God is taking the world somewhere. He's got plans. Apparently he's promised to do for all of us what he did for Jesus after he died. And for the whole world too. Yes, that really blows me away. This God really does love the whole world, and wants to make it all alive in a new way, like he did with Jesus on the first day of the week....And when he does that we'll meet Jesus himself! He'll be there. He'll come back to us--or maybe I should say, we'll be there with him.....this is the point: when we take the bread and break it and eat it, when we take the wine and share it around, it isn't only that we seem to be there with him at his last supper. We are there with him in his new world. What we do seems to bring all the past--all the story of Jesus--and all the future--the time when he comes back again, when God makes the whole world new--all together into one moment." p.27
"Some people think of the Christian's 'promised land' as simply 'heaven'. Some even think that this could be rather boring. How wrong they are. In Paul's writings, the Christian's 'promised land' is the entire renewed world. If we die before the time, we will go to 'heaven', that is, into God's dimension of existence. But the long-term hope is that all those in 'heaven' and presently on earth will be transformed, re-embodied, to join in the new life when (as Revelation 21 says, echoing an old Jewish theme) God will make new heavens and a new earth. Within this transformation of reality, Jesus himself will be personally present. Every longing of our hearts will be satisfied in our meeting with him and being nourished by his presence and his love. Sometimes the New Testament talks of this event as Jesus' 'coming'; sometimes of his 'royal presence'. These are different ways of saying something for which we don't have the right language at the moment, but which will be real, solid and lovely when it happens." p. 56-57
Monday, September 22, 2008
Matthew, Apostle and Evangelist 21 Sept NT
One day Jesus was walking and saw a tax collector named Matthew sitting at a tax collection post, and said to him, "Follow me." And Matthew stood up and followed Him, and became one of His twelve apostles. (See Matthew 9:9-13 = Mark 2:13-17 = Luke 5:27-32)
Tax collectors in those days were social outcasts.
Devout Jews avoided them because they were usually dishonest (the job carried no salary, and they were expected to make their profits by cheating the people from whom they collected taxes).
Patriotic and nationalistic Jews hated them because they were agents of the Roman government, the conquerors, and hated them with a double hatred if (like Matthew) they were Jews, because they had gone over to the enemy, had betrayed their own people for money.
Thus, throughout the Gospels, we find tax collectors (publicans) mentioned as a standard type of sinful and despised outcast.
Matthew brought many of his former associates to meet Jesus, and social outcasts in general were shown that the love of Jesus extended even to them.
Jesus numbered among his disciples persons of widely different backgrounds. They included not only Matthew, a former agent of the Roman government, but Simon the Zealot [not to be confused with Simon Peter].
Josephus tells us that the Zealots were fanatical nationalists, determined to drive out the Romans by guerrilla tactics, ambushes, assassinations, terrorist methods, or whatever worked. Their motto was, "No king but Messiah, no tax but the Temple, no friend but the Zealot."
It is not clear that Simon was, or had been, a member of the group that Josephus describes, but it seems clear that he would have regarded himself as at the opposite end of the political spectrum from Matthew.
The name "Matthew" means "gift of the LORD."
Mark and Luke, in the story of his calling, name him "Levi." Perhaps this was his original name, and he received a new name from Jesus when he became a disciple. (It has also been suggested that he was simply a member of the tribe of Levi.)
Of Matthew's life after Pentecost the Scriptures tell us nothing.
Later accounts of his life vary, some reporting that he was martyred, others that he died a natural death. The Christian community since early times has commemorated him as a martyr.
Whether the Apostle Matthew is also the Evangelist Matthew -- that is, whether the Apostle Matthew wrote the Gospel that bears his name -- is disputed. The Gospel itself does not say who wrote it, but the designation "according to Matthew" is very old.
In favor of his authorship it may be noted that (1) while Mark and Luke give the fourth pair of Apostles as "Matthew and Thomas," the Gospel of Matthew gives them as "Thomas and Matthew"; and (2) while Luke 5:29 explicitly states, and Mark 2:15 suggests, that Matthew gave a banquet for Jesus, Matthew 9:10 in describing the same banquet does not indicate who the host was. Both of these variations would be routine touches of modesty if Matthew was the author.
On the other hand, the gospel (1) does not have the manner of an eyewitness, and (2) is thought by many scholars to contain material borrowed from Mark, whereas one would not expect someone who had been an eyewitness to borrow from someone who had not. ( Note: The view that Mark is an older Gospel than Matthew is widespread and not long ago many scholars regarded the matter as settled. However, there is respectable opinion holding that Matthew is the earliest Gospel after all. See, for example, the comments in the MATTHEW volume of The Anchor Bible [check your local library].)
Perhaps the Gospel was written by some early Christian, not an apostle, whose name was Matthew, and about whom nothing else is known. Early Christian readers, hearing the Gospel ascribed to "Matthew," would naturally associate it with the Apostle of that name, and so the ascribing of the work to the Apostle Matthew becomes common at an early date, by a perfectly natural misunderstanding.
Papias of Hierapolis, writing in the late first or early second century, says that Matthew compiled the sayings (Logia) of Jesus in Hebrew. Now the material common to Matthew and Luke, but not to Mark, includes sayings of Jesus but almost no narrative. It has therefore been conjectured that there was once a document (usually called Q), now lost, that is basically a collection of speeches by Jesus, and that Matthew (the evangelist) and Luke, had access to it while Mark did not. It has been suggested that Matthew (the apostle) is the author of this document Q, which may well have been first written in Hebrew (or Aramaic).
The Scripture readings associated with the day bear the themes of Matthew as a Gospel-writer (hence readings that speak of the Scriptures), Matthew as an Apostle, and Matthew as a sinner called by God's grace.
written by James Kiefer
Monday, September 15, 2008
The Dragon of Choice
To see and to live is better than to choose; to ride the adventure of faith and hope and love is better than to plot your course to the Fortunate Isles, those illusions. Only an ingrate will not accept a gift, and if I decide what you are to give me, I am just such an ingrate. Heaven itself is God’s choice and not mine, and for that I am grateful. Quite a fit place for myself in the hereafter could I design, with features all of my own choosing. A tight and fit little place would it be, but it would have that unmistakable tang of char breathed out from a reptilian belly.
Beware of Choice, the Dragon, and be wise.
This is a great article....from Touchstone Magazine
Christian Community...being a part of the one, holy, catholic Christian Church
"Human love lives by uncontrolled and uncontrollable dark desires; spiritual love lives in the clear light of service ordered by the truth. Human love produces human subjection, dependence, constraint; spiritual love creates freedom of the brethren under the Word. Human love breeds hothouse flowers; spiritual love creates the fruits that grow healthily in accord with God's good will in the rain and storm and sunshine of God's outdoors. The existence of any Christian life together depends on whether it succeeds at the right time in bringing out the ability to distinguish between a human ideal and God's reality, between spiritual and human community.
The life or death of a Christian community is determined by whether it achieves sober wisdom on this point as soon as possible. In other words, life together under the Word will remain sound and healthy only where it does not form itself into a movement, an order, a society, a collegium pietatis, but rather where it understands itself a being a part of the one, holy, catholic, Christian Church, where it shares actively and passively in the sufferings and struggles and promise of the whole Church. Every principle of selection and every separation connected with it that is not necessitated quite objectively by common work, local conditions, or family connections is of the greatest danger to a Christian community. When the way of intellectual or spiritual selection is taken the human element always insinuates itself and robs the fellowship of its spiritual power and effectiveness for the Church, drives it into sectarianism." Dietrich Bonhoeffer p.37 Life Together
Sunday, September 14, 2008
The Way of the Cross...exhortation from PJL
Jesus told Peter, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, let him deny himself.” Self-denial is a basic demand of discipleship. We can’t follow Jesus if we don’t do it.
Jesus is not talking about afflicting our bodies with fasting and flagellation, but about something more fundamental. Self-denial means giving up our will and submitting ourselves to the will of another. Self-denial means bending our plans, hopes, dreams, actions to Jesus and to His Father.
Practically, that often means submission to those who speak for Jesus. Jesus doesn’t talk to us directly, but exercises His authority through elders and pastors, through parents and professors, through our boss at work and through a husband at home. Submitting to Jesus means submitting to them.
In our culture, getting your own way and doing your own thing and following your dream are the only absolute imperatives. To us, self-denial looks pretty grim. This looks more like a way of death than a way of life.
Yet Jesus promises life: “whoever wishes to save his life shall lose it; but whoever loses his life for My sake shall find it.” What does it profit if a man gains everything he desires but loses his own soul?
Self-denial is the way of life because it is the way of God’s life. Jesus, the Incarnate God, shows us how it’s done. He submits to His Father’s will, even to the point of excruciating death, and is transfigured to glorious life. Self-denial is the way to the life of God, because God’s own way is the way of self-denial.
posted by Peter J. Leithart on Sunday, September 14, 2008 at 5:33 am
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Being Culturally Savvy
Our Pastor gave a wonderful sermon last Sunday on being culturally savvy. God expects us to be IN the world but not of it and we can do this by practicing selective enculturation. Christians are to be engaged with non-Christians. He said that through the years Christian's attitudes have tended to polarize between being strict separationist from the world or by being totally permissive. Today Christians tend to lean more toward permissiveness. Sometimes the answer to this problem is to make rules, rules, and more rules. He said there is really only one rule we are to live by: LOVE GOD and do what you want. The key is in what it means to love God….in loving God we will always want to honor Him and love our neighbor….not exploit them, because our neighbors also bear his image. All people are created in his image. He said if we persist in choosing sin, patterns develop and we become callous, losing any distinction between godliness and ungodliness and we wind up only keeping half of that one rule…...the half that is about doing what WE want and we become totally selfish people….then we wind up dishonoring God and exploiting our neighbors. God wants us to be salt and light, faithful Christians (Christ bearers) IN the culture in which we live.
Sunday, September 7, 2008
If You're Going the Wrong Way.........
I picked up this anecdotal book in the Cokesbury bookstore recently. Written by James W. Moore, senior pastor of St. Luke's United Methodist Church in Houston, TX. Here are a few notes:
Life is meant to be a journey in which we draw closer to God. At any given moment we are either moving toward God or away from God. Jesus said, "I want you to take up my cross and live in the spirit of unconditional love, unwavering forgiveness, amazing grace, unflinching commitment and sacrificial service." We may like to sing about the cross, but we're not sure we want to live like that!
When you are going a dangerous way, a destructive way, a potentially deadly way--there is only one thing to do: Turn around as fast as you can! With God turnarounds are allowed! God enables and empowers turnarounds.
Friday, September 5, 2008
News from the London Times....
News: Misunderestimating the opposition
Gerard Baker says in the London Times: “It never ceases to amaze me how the Left falls again and again into the old trap of underestimating politicians whom they don’t understand. From Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher to George Bush and Mrs Palin, they do it every time. Because these characters talk a bit funny and have ridiculously antiquated views about faith, family and nation, because they haven’t spent time bending the knee to the intellectual metropolitan elites, they can’t be taken seriously.”
posted by Peter J. Leithart on Friday, September 5, 2008 at 10:44 am
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
The Osama Bin Laden I Know by Peter Bergen
I started listening to this book on CD yesterday in the car on our way home from Mama's house. It gives accounts from interviews with more than 50 people who knew Osama Bin Laden personally. The interviews paint a picture of Bin Laden from a young age as being shy, pious, and "different." I am only into chapter 2 but the stories tell of his transformation into a mujahideen committed to offensive jihad (terrorism.)
The Egyptian writer Sayyid Qutub, is credited with presenting the ideological underpinning of the "Islamic Awakening" which aroused many young people to embrace jihad not only defensively, but offensively. He founded the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood which was a movement of the young against an ossified establishment of middle eastern regimes. His books were very popular Islamic worldview "bibles" but were very controversial. He was executed in the 60's by the Nasser government and this propelled him into being seen as a martyr by his followers. His writings became the philosophical framework for al-Qaida and influenced Osama Bin Laden greatly.
I hope I get to finish the book/CD's....John actually checked it out. The stories are very enlightening about arabs, muslims and their culture.
TTYL
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