Archive for August, 2009

Work, Work, Work and glorifying God

workWell, that’s another hard shift over, a few nice days off now. Talking of work and hard shifts, it reminded me of the Fall.

“Because you have listened to the voice of your wife and have eaten of the tree
of which I commanded you, ‘You shall not eat of it,’ cursed is the ground because of you;
in pain you shall eat of it all the days of your life; thorns and thistles it shall bring forth for you;
and you shall eat the plants of the field. By the sweat of your face
you shall eat bread, till you return to the ground, for out of it you were taken;
for you are dust, and to dust you shall return.” Genesis 3:17-19 (ESV).

Now I totally understand, why, when the alarm clock goes of in the morning a feeling of depression sinks in….. with the thought of here we go again…. work, work ,work!!! Luckily it isn’t that bad, but the serious side to this is the effect of sin in every part of life.

God had warned man not to eat the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil (Gen 2:16-17). We know what happened next, they did exactly the opposite of what was expected, they ate the fruit of the tree. They would die, but God in His mercy postponed it. It is by God’s grace that we all still walk around and breath. The punishment was hard toil as the ground would not so easily offer up food to eat.

This, is why we don’t like work too much, although work is good for you , it’s just that it is not going to be easy.

As Christians, we should carry out our work in a way that glorifies God, in fact everything we do should glorify God. Its took me a long time to realize that Glorifying God includes my work… so at the moment to my own shame.. its a work in progress.

I was watching a program on UCB, I can not for the life of me remember what it was called, but a couple of guys were explaining how they pray for their work place/colleagues and bosses (yes, even their boss), they would pray while walking in corridors in the offices etc. I felt convicted at that point. So now I have written out a plan for ‘work prayer’ before work at/in and around work, that God’s sovereign presence will be felt and that His name be glorified in my own work place. So starting from my next shift, that is my plan.

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Stryper website

Stryper have an all new website on the go.  All the info you need on this great band, you can sample their new material plus all the older…

 

stryperdotcom

 

You can check them out at  youtube.com/strypertube

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Parables!

weedsI was, as usual, forum surfing, I love forums and I came across a thread on parables.  The initial thread was not about how we interprit parables but it eventually went that way, if you use forums you will know what I mean.  The main argument that I was against, is that, parables are allegorical and that they have deeper meaning, almost abstract, infact in one post it was implied that if you did not see it this way you were basically on an elementary level of understanding, and did not posses the keys to understand Jesus’ teaching.

As with all the Gospels, they have been woven together by the authors as a potrait of the life of our Saviour through the Holy Spirit, there is nothing abstract about Jesus’ teaching,  it always elicitate a response from the hearer or reader.  So to reply to this post I dug out some books and wrote out my thoughts on the matter.

The English word for parable refers to short narratives. The Greek and Hebrew words for ‘parable’ are much broader, Jesus’ parables are both works of art and weapons he used in the conflict with his opponents.

Jesus used ‘parables’ as a teaching method as was common form in those days and before. Jesus chose this method frequently to explain the kingdom of God and to show God’s character and God’s expectations for His people.

The Greek word for parable, ‘parabole’ is a broader definition than the English equivalent, it can mean: Proverb (LK 4:23), a riddle (MK 3.23), a comparison (MT 13:33, a contrast (LK 18:18) and both simple stories (Lk13:6-9) and complex (MT 22:1-14).

 

Parables are intended to stimulate thought and elicit a response from the hearer, as they were originally spoken to the people (and might I add to us who now read them).

A ’similitude’ is an extended ’simile’ (an explicit comparison using ‘like’ or ‘as’), it is a comparison relating a typical or recurring event in real life. cf, Mt 13:31-32.

Examples of this are all in Luke: ‘the good Samaritan, the rich fool, the rich man and Lazarus and the Pharisee and Tax collector’.

Other parables are extended metaphors (implied comparison) referring to a fictional event or events to express a moral or spiritual truth. In this sense ‘allegory’ is a series of metaphors, the parable of the sower is a good example.

Some use Hyperbolic statements and are pseudo-realistic in nature: It would be very unlikely that in 1st century Palestine that anyone would be in debt of 10,000 (equivalent now of a few million Pounds/Dollars) Mt 18:23-35.

Parables elicit thought, 22 parables start with a question such as ‘ who from you….?’ or ‘what do you think….?’ Most of the parables are theocentric in that they focus on God, His Kingdom and expectations. Parables are often invitations to change behavioral patterns, change your ways.

There are allegorical elements within the parables but the parables are not Altogether allegorical, as We have seen in my post above on how St Augustine used allegory to incorrectly interpret the ‘Good Samaritan’.

Below is a quote from my earlier post:

If you take your approach, that is totally allegorical, you end up with serious problems. I will use St Augustine as an example. St Augustine with out a doubt was one of the great theologians, however his use of allegory in the parables was wrong. look at the good samaritan and how he used allegory to interprit it.

Basically, the  rich young man asked Jesus a question (who is my neighbour?) and Jesus answered him in a parable, the gist of the story is that the Samaritan was the good neighbour (samaritans where despised by the Jews).

St Augustine took this and said all sorts,:

1, The traveller was ‘Adam’
2, Jerusalem was the heavenly city of peace from which he fell
3, Jericho was the human mortality that he inherited from the Fall
4, The robber were the devil and his angels, who stripped him of his mortaliy
5, The priest and levite were the priesthood and ministry of the OT
6, The good samaritan was Christ himself
7, and it goes on.
(Augustine, Quaestiones Evangeliorium 2.19)

Now, that is were allegory gets you, The real message of the parable was, who the real neighbour was, an answer to the question in a real situation to a person.

Most of the parables, are about the Kingdom of God/Heaven and are Eschatological in theme.

 

Now regarding the Passage Mark 4:10-12, one of the keys to understanding the parables lies in discovering the original audience to whom they were spoken and why the evangelists placed the parables in the narrative text where they did, many times the parables came down to the evangelist without context. Cf, Luke 1:1-4.

What did Mark mean? Most probably the key to this is a play on words by Jesus’ native Aramaic language. The word ‘methal’ wich is translated ‘parabole’ in Greek (LXX) was used for a whole range of figures of speech in the riddle/puzzle/parable category and not be just for the story variety in English.

 

Verse 11 probably meant that the meaning of Jesus’ ministry (the secret of the kingdom) could not be perceived by those outside; it was like a ‘methal’, a riddle, to them. Hence his speaking in ‘methelin’ parables was part of the ‘methal’(riddle) of his WHOLE MINISTRY to them.

 

They saw, but failed to see; they heard – and even understood – the parables, but they failed to hear in a way that led to obedience.

 

 

Now, these parables were not some form of abstract, needing special interpretation as we know that people heard them and understood. Cf:

  1.  Jesus told parables to people LK 15:3; 18:9; 19:11, with the clear implication that the parables were to be understood.
  2. The ‘Expert in the Law’ clearly understood the parable Jesus spoke (Lk 10:25-37)

  3. The chief priests and Pharisees understood the parable of the ‘tenants’ (Mt 21:45)

 

 

Their problem was not with understanding, but with letting the parables alter their behaviour!

 

Various, works/scholars have been cited in this post.

Gordon D Fee

Douglas Stuart

K R snodgrass

J Drane

I H Marshall

Works:

New Bible Dictionary

Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels

Introduction to the New Testament

How to read the bible for all its worth

 And various bible translations, ESV< KJV< NLT<NIV

 These books would be well worth geting if you have not already got them

 

 

Soli Deo Gloria

Phil

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Pray for Schools

ABC

ABC

Now that the summer holidays are nearly over and all the schools are starting to go back, we should be thinking of praying for our schools.
Following on from yesterday, praying for those in political power, I remembered, that St Ninians (Church of Scotland) are seeking from within their congregation, people to pray for local schools.
Again, if all the body of our Lord Jesus were to do this daily, possibly in groups, with each group dedicated to praying for a particular school, think of the change within our schools this would create.  I came across a website dedicated for this purpose, schoolsprayernetwork

The Schools Prayer Network exists to stimulate and encourage committed Christian prayer for every school in the UK, and to provide a means of communication and support for those concerned

Pray for Schools
Christians are so good at being activists that we sometimes forget the simple importance and power of prayer. Committing to pray regularly for your local school is a very effective way of getting involved and offering support. Forming or joining a local prayer group makes that commitment easier, providing you with the joy and encouragement of meeting with others and sharing answers to prayer.

Schools are generally very happy to know that they are being supported in this way. You could contact the Head to let him or her know about the group, and ask if there are specific prayer requests. Some prayer groups meet on school premises, others at the local church. You are likely to find support among Christian parents, teachers, governors, pupils and local church members. (From Transforminglives.org.uk)

If your church has not got anything like this organized, why don’t you suggest it, or get some of your friends from church and start doing it yourselves.

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The ‘State’ we are in!

I have been reading,  D Martin Lloyd Jones’ book ‘Sanctified through the truth’.   On pg 13,14 and 15 he starts to talk about the Christian and the state, I have typed it out below as it is well worth the reading:

“The function of the state are of necessity good because the state has been appointed by God; let us never forget that…”

“The state is not human contrivance, it is not man who conceived the idea of the state and law, it is God who ordained it. God has ordained the bounds and the habitation of every nation; God has called the magistrates and the powers that be, and put them into being. I can say, therefore, that as God has organised the state, indeed all the states of the world, it is the business of all to see to it that the state does its work properly. And one of the duties of the state is, therefore, to see that God’s name is honoured and glorified…”

“It is therefore the business of the Christian, as a citizen of the state, to see that all that is done … for if God has decreed that the state is the way in which the world should be governed, Christian people should be concerned to see that it is done in the right and true way.”

“But you will see at once that the purpose of all this is simply to set a limit on sin and to the results of sin and wrong doing.”

In light of this, how do we see our own Governments/leaders?   It made me think about all sorts of things politically, I am quite politically minded as it is, but what got me was, do I pray enough for our leaders, do we pray enough for our leaders either individually or as a corporate Christian body? Or is it the occasional side though…  “oh, well I’m praying, so I might as well pray for some leaders”, many a time I have been like  that. 

What a difference it would make if we all prayed  everyday, every week for our  political leaders, both individual and in the Church.  Not just praying but also speaking out.  Satan must be loving the whole ‘tolerance’ attitude, it doesn’t matter about other religions as Satan himself knows they are false, he  just wants to  keep Christians quiet!

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Rocking for the Rock!

Rocking for the Rock 

Sounds like a christian slogan from the 80’s, well, it probably is. 

What happened to good rock music were the guitar solo was twice the length of the song?? Mmmmm maybe that’s a relic from the 80’s as well, but, now you can be that awe inspiring rock guitarist and praise God doing it…

Guitar praise…. with this game you get a guitar (controller) its usb and wireless.  Now there is no excuse not to rock it out… you can be that guitarist you always wanted to be….  :-)   I have never played it but it does look good.

 “JAM WITH THE BAND!

Strap on the guitar and play along with your favorite bands—tobyMac, Relient K, Flyleaf, Newsboys —and more. SHRED the riffs…THUMP the bass…BLAST that solid Christian Rock”!

 

Guitar Praise

Guitar Praise

 

Check out the website:

 http://www.guitarpraise.com/

 And here’s the link to the songs you’ll be guitar-praising too:

 http://www.guitarpraise.com/song_list.php

 Maybe I’ll get one myself, I’ll have to get a bit fitter for those ‘Van Halen’ scissor kick jumps.

 

 

 

Guitar Praise screen shot

Guitar Praise screen shot Guitar praise in action

 

Here’s some links I came across for some good ole rock music, I wasn’t a christian when these bands were going, I can remember my brother playing them though.

And if your a real metal head you can check out Mortification on youtube aswel.

 

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