Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Introduction to 2 Peter



Second Peter is a book for anyone who has ever had questions about their faith.

Questions like, is my faith really making any difference? Why doesn’t my faith seem to be working? Why it is so hard to repent of sin? Why is godliness so difficult? Why do I feel ineffective and unproductive in my faith? Why is ministry so hard?

Questions like, isn’t it possible that we are all just following a bunch of cleverly invented stories? How do we know the most significant events even happened? Are they recorded elsewhere in history outside of the Bible? Even if we grant that the events did take place, how do we know that the Bible was written anywhere near the actual time of the events? And even if it was, isn’t it stretching intellectual integrity just a bit to say that these sixty-six books have remained intact and true to their original form after thousands of years? How do we know the Bible is true? How do we know the Bible is trustworthy? And even if it is, isn’t it stretching intellectual integrity just a bit for modern people like us to hang their entire lives on the words of some ancient text?

Questions like, what really distinguishes true from false? There are so many competing teachings and perspectives and opinions and even lifestyles... who can I really trust? How do we handle all of these competing ideas and lifestyles and perspectives? Who’s right? And who’s to say? What is a Christian to think? What is a Christian to do?

Questions like, isn’t it possible that our Christian hope is just wishful thinking? After all, our faith is not empirical. We can’t test our future hope. There’s really no way to know for sure that Jesus is coming back. There’s no way to confirm the reality of a final judgment day. The new heavens and new earth sound more like fanciful myth than real hope, don’t they?

And even if I had the answers to all of these questions, how should I live? What am I to do with what I know?

Second Peter is a book for anyone with questions about their faith. Second Peter is a book for anyone who has ever had deep-seated doubts. Second Peter is a book for anyone who has ever been frustrated as a Christian in life and ministry.

Because where there is honesty, there are questions.

Why do questions about faith matter? Because faith in Jesus is “precious” and infinitely valuable (1:1). Therefore, we dare not ignore our questions. We must face them, alongside Peter and his readers.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Reading Round-Up

A moving story. Please read.

The good folks at The Resurgence are doing an excellent and ongoing series on pitfalls in church planting. (Chris & Cassie, have you seen this? If not, it may be worth your time to sit down and look at it with Jason and Letitia… lots of good stuff.) I think many of the general principles would actually be helpful to anyone in ministry or anyone in leadership.

Here is an informative presentation from Jonathan Jarvis, a designer and graduate student in L.A.: “The Crisis of Credit Visualized.”

Remind me never to be Treasury Secretary! According to this article from the New York Times about Timothy Geithner, “At 47, the same age as the president, Mr. Geithner works out at 5:30 a.m., gets to his desk by 6:30 and leaves 15 hours later.”

Here is something I encourage everyone to take a look at... it will only take about 20 min of your time, and it is well worth it: Shai Agassi’s bold plan for the mass adoption of electric cars.

How about this from the Wall Street Journal? America’s Newest Profession: Bloggers for Hire. No kidding: “In America today, there are almost as many people making their living as bloggers as there are lawyers. Already more Americans are making their primary income from posting their opinions than Americans working as computer programmers or firefighters.”

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Redeeming Work, Part VI



Perhaps you have seen someone who is struggling in life and heard the saying, “They were just dealt a bad hand.”

Figuratively speaking, we all hold cards in our hand—our background, stage of life, locale, job and financial resources, future hopes and dreams, etc. Some of these cards were dealt to us, some we have acquired, and others we have managed to get rid of. Whatever the case, we all hold a set of cards in our hand.

And the truth is, we all spend enormous amounts of time and energy trying to get the right cards, trying to get that winning hand. Sometimes we even feel we have made irreparable mistakes in the past that have ruined our chances of winning.

But what if God is less concerned with whether we have all the right cards and more concerned with how we play the cards that we do have?

In Luke 16, Jesus tells a parable about a man who is on the verge of losing it all. He is on the verge of becoming unemployed and homeless, all in the same day. He can’t afford to wait for better cards. This hand is the only hand he has left.

You can read the parable for yourself in Luke 16:1-9. What is the point that Jesus is making? Very simply, the dishonest manager acted shrewdly. He had only one hand left, and he played it well. He was careful and not careless.

In v. 9, Jesus draws his point of application. He gives the only imperative of this text. He says that we, too, ought to act shrewdly.

The dishonest manager considered what was to come and then acted accordingly. So, too, should we. We ought to live in light of what we know to be true about the age to come rather than living only in light of what we know to be true about this age (as if there were no age to come). This is the difference between being careful and being careless.

So we see that God is less concerned with whether you have all the right cards and more concerned with how you play the cards that you do have. The reality is, one day we will all have to give an account of how we played our cards (2 Corinthians 5:10; Hebrews 9:27). Therefore, we, like the dishonest manager, ought to consider what we know to be true about the age to come and act accordingly. In doing so, we will be acting shrewdly.

Specifically, Jesus says in v. 9 that we ought to act shrewdly in relation to our worldly wealth. Luke then uses this parable as a launching point for relaying other of Jesus’ sayings on the issue of how we relate to our worldly wealth. You can read these sayings in Luke 16:10-12.

Theologically, the “worldly wealth” that Jesus refers to is the wealth of this age. “True riches” are the wealth of the age to come, namely, sanctification of self, ministry to others, etc. These are the wealth of the future and in-breaking kingdom of God.

Practically, your job counts as part of your worldly wealth. Take a look at this article from a recent issue of TIME Magazine to see what I mean: Jobs Are The New Assets.

Here’s the point: God is less concerned with whether you have all the right cards and more concerned with how you play the cards that you do have. A big part of this is your worldly wealth, and that includes your job.

In these sayings (vv. 10-12), Jesus is talking about being faithful with what has been entrusted to you. Your worldly wealth is not your own. Your worldly wealth, including your job, is a stewardship.

If your job is a stewardship, this means that (1) it is temporary, and (2) you’re accountable. [HT: Andy Stanley] And given that our jobs are stewardships that have been entrusted to us, Jesus says we ought to be faithful in the little things.

With respect to our future, we ought to be faithful with even a little bit of worldly wealth (including our jobs) so that we can be entrusted with greater worldly wealth.

With respect to our eternity, we ought to be faithful with even a little bit of worldly wealth (including our jobs) so that we can be entrusted with true riches, i.e. opportunities for sanctification, opportunities for ministry, etc.

Indeed, God is less concerned with whether you have all the right cards and more concerned with how you play the cards that you do have. Therefore, we ought to be faithful in the little things, even (or especially) at work.