Categories
Christian Living

Goals for a New Year

If you go all the way back to the beginning of 2014, you will find that one of my goals for the year was to read one Christian book a month. Though I didn’t succeed in all my 2014 goals, I did accomplish my reading goal, including the completion of another reading through of the Bible (though that took 18 months, instead of 12).
Old books on a library shelf representing reading goals for the year
I tell you this to remind you that I believe it is very important to have a plan for your Christian growth. I had a plan to read 12 books. I surpassed my goal. But if my plan had been more vague, such as if I had just said to myself, “This year I’ll read more,” how would I measure if I really met the goal? We set goals in almost every other area of life. We should do the same with this most important thing called: our relationship with God! So as you think through your Christian life, it is important that you make specific goals and plans. Write them down.

I write mine down as a yearly Personal Worship Plan, and then stick that plan in the front of my Bible so I can review it throughout the year. Here is a copy of a blank plan if you’d like to use it too:
Personal Worship Plan Booklet Link (Just click on this pdf image link to open or download the file.)

And regarding the reading I did, one of my brothers recently asked me what I’d recommend for reading. So now that I’ve finished my 2014 reading, let me tell you which ones I read last year that I would recommend you to check out (and also which ones to avoid!)


Highly Recommended:
The Jesus I Never Knew, Philip Yancey
The Hiding Place, Corrie ten Boom
These are my top two from the year. They are both well-worth your time. In fact, because I enjoyed it so much, I read The Hiding Place twice. Once on my own, and then a second time with Paige.

Also, I re-read two books with my men’s small group that I would highly recommend:
Life of a God-Made Man, Dan Doriani – excellent for all men (though women would benefit from it too), but now it is only available for purchase as an e-book;
Radical, David Platt – a great reminder of what life is really all about, and a challenge for us to live with radical devotion for Jesus.


Recommended:
These next three are also worth reading, though they are not as highly recommended as the ones listed above.

The Pursuit of God, A. W. Tozer – this book is free at The Gutenberg Project. Just search for “The Pursuit of God” or A. W. Tozer.

Embracing Obscurity, anonymous – My favorite chapter was the one on suffering. It was a useful reminder of how we too often desire the spotlight, when the proper place for the spotlight is on Jesus and the good news He brings.

The Imitation of Christ, Thomas à Kempis
Excellent, but due to the out-dated use of English, I would only say “recommended” for most people. It is just too laborious for most people to wade through. But very good insights if you are willing to work through it. In case you didn’t know, The Imitation of Christ became, and remained for several hundred years, the second-most widely read book in the world, surpassed only by the Bible. This book is also free to download or read from The Gutenberg Project. Just search for The Imitation of Christ.


Recommended for specific situations:
Out of the Saltshaker and into the World, Rebecca Pippert (a good book on basic evangelism)

Darwin on Trial, Philip Johnson (if you enjoy apologetics, this is a very good read.)

The Wounded Healer, Henri Nouwen (written primarily for those who work in hands-on church ministry. If that is you, then this is a good read, and others would benefit from it as well.)

Prayer: Conversing with God, Rosalind Rinker (this is primarily about how to engage in a new prayer style in small groups. So if you are a leader of a small group, this could be beneficial if you want to try a new prayer direction)


Not Recommended:
These are the books I read last year that I would tell you to not worry with…
Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola
The Seven Storey Mountain, Thomas Merton
The Diary of Anne Frank (yes, this is a classic, and while it is an interesting read into the life of a teenage girl in hiding during WW2, it is not a tremendous help in Christian living. So for history and classic reading…sure. But if you are looking for a book to read for Christian growth…not recommended.
Why I Am A Christian, Norman Geisler, ed. – too academic.


And finally, let me also give you some other books that I would recommend if you have not read them. These are books that I have read before 2014, but which I think are excellent for everyone:

Celebration of Discipline, Richard Foster
How to Develop a Powerful Prayer Life, Gregory Frizzell
Returning to Holiness, Gregory Frizzell
Knowing God, J. I. Packer
Mere Christianity, C. S. Lewis
Can Man Live Without God, Ravi Zacharias
The Ragamuffin Gospel, Brennan Manning
Every Man’s Battle, Arterburn & Yoeker
More than a Carpenter, Josh McDowell


Are there other books you read in 2014 that you would recommend? 

Categories
Christian Living

A New Year

Well a new January 1 has arrived again, meaning a new year is here.
2014 is behind us and 2015 has arrived.
HAPPY NEW YEAR TO YOU!
firework explosion symbolizing the beginning of the New Year
How well did you do on meeting all those plans and goals you set at the beginning of 2014?
How well do you think you will do in 2015?

One of my plans from the outset of this blog was to post more often. That plan hasn’t been fulfilled very well to date. My average is at just under 2 posts per week for the last year-and-a-half. Probably not too bad, but I would still like to be able to post more often. Of course, at several points along the journey, I have mentioned that I should post shorter thoughts, which might let me post more often. So once again, that will be one of my goals. The way I plan to do so is by posting a quote of the day from the Christian authors/books that have impacted me. Going from 2 posts a week to 7 might be too big a jump, and I might fail at it, but it is one of my goals for 2015. (For those who are wondering, I am also still planning to post at least one devotional-type post/thought each week as well – typically on Tuesdays.)

What is one of your goals that you hope will impact either yourself or others for Jesus in 2015?

Categories
Christian Living

You Were Made To Burn

“You Were Made To Burn”
  by brian rushing

Today, I basically just want to share with you an extended quote from J. C. Ryle. This quote describes what it means to have zeal (or great passion) for God.
candle that is lit and slowly disintegrating fulfilling its purpose - it was meant to burn

Zeal in religion is a burning desire to please God, to do His will, and to advance His glory in the world in every possible way. It is a desire which no man feels by nature—which the Spirit puts in the heart of every believer when he is converted—but which some believers feel so much more strongly than others that they alone deserve to be called ‘zealous’ men ….

A zealous man in religion is pre-eminently a man of one thing. It is not enough to say that he is earnest, hearty, uncompromising, thorough-going, whole-hearted, fervent in spirit.

He only sees one thing, he cares for one thing, he lives for one thing, he is swallowed up in one thing; and that one thing is to please God.

Whether he lives, or whether he dies—
whether he has health, or whether he has sickness—
whether he is rich, or whether he is poor—
whether he pleases man, or whether he gives offence—
whether he is thought wise, or whether he is thought foolish—
whether he gets blame, or whether he gets praise—
whether he gets honour, or whether he gets shame—
for all this the zealous man cares nothing at all.
He burns for one thing; and that one thing is to please God, and to advance God’s glory.

If he is consumed in the very burning, he cares not for it—he is content. He feels that, like a lamp, he is made to burn; and if consumed in burning, he has but done the work for which God appointed him.

Such a one will always find a sphere for his zeal.
If he cannot preach, work, and give money, he will cry, and sigh, and pray…. If he cannot fight in the valley with Joshua, he will do the work of Moses, Aaron, and Hur, on the hill (Exodus 17:9-13). If he is cut off from working himself, he will give the Lord no rest till help is raised up from another quarter, and the work is done. This is what I mean when I speak of ’zeal’ in religion. (Practical Religion, 1959 ed., p. 130)

Jesus said that you are the light of the world. You are that lamp (or candle) that was made to burn. Are you willing to be consumed in the burning, allowing your wick to burn up and your wax to pour out, spending yourself and being spent, knowing that you are simply being consumed by the work that God has appointed for you?

God, help me to be willing to be consumed in the very burning of serving You.

        (Quotes in today’s post are from Practical Religion by J. C. Ryle)


Categories
Christian Living

Life Is Full of Trouble

“Life Is Full of Trouble”
  by brian rushing

If life was able to be ordered at the drive-thru window, we’d say something like: “God, I want combo #1… the Trouble-Free Life with the side of popularity and success. Leave off the pain, problems, and frustrations. Oh, and be sure to add lots of extra cash. And go ahead and Supersize it!”

Unfortunately, that’s not how it works.
Life is not Burger King. You can’t “Have it your way.”

But when we don’t get our way, and instead find ourselves on a path full of pain, heartache, and trouble, we often get disappointed with God. We wonder, “Why, God? Why is this happening to me? Why aren’t you keeping me happy?” When we have taken the false view that God’s job in our lives is to keep us happy, we’ll find that disappointment overtakes us quickly.
signs that read "disappointment" to signify life is often full of trouble
“But this idea of God’s intention is a complete mistake: God’s wisdom is not, and never was, pledged to keep a fallen world happy, or to make ungodliness comfortable. Not even to Christians has he promised a trouble-free life; rather the reverse. He has other ends in view for life in this world than simply to make it easy for everyone.”

Well that’s not what I want to hear!
If that’s the case, then what is His plan for my life?
If His plan for my life is not MY happiness, then what should I be looking for?

Maybe J. I. Packer has it right when he tells us that God is working for His Happiness.

It is staggering that God should love sinners; yet it is true. God loves creatures who have become unlovely and (one would have thought) unlovable. There was nothing whatever in the objects of his love to call it forth; nothing in us could attract or prompt it. Love among persons is awakened by something in the beloved, but the love of God is free, spontaneous, unevoked, uncaused. God loves people because he has chosen to love them and no reason for his love can be given except his own sovereign good pleasure.

God was happy without humans before they were made; he would have continued happy had he simply destroyed them after they had sinned; but as it is he has set his love upon particular sinners, and this means that, by his own free voluntary choice, he will not know perfect and unmixed happiness again till he has brought every one of them to heaven.

God is always working, but it is not toward my temporary happiness on earth based on a trouble-free life. Rather, God is working toward my eternal happiness based on me being with Him forever. And I have to learn that it is not my circumstances that bring me true joy and pleasure in this life, but rather it is my relationship and daily walking with Him. So trouble-free living living isn’t the goal that He has for me on this earth… walking with Him in contentment is.

How well am I walking in contentment with Him?

        (Quotes in today’s post are from Knowing God by J. I. Packer)


Categories
Christian Living

Helping Others is Inconvenient So Just Ignore Them

“Helping Others is Inconvenient So Just Ignore Them”
  by brian rushing

Once again, a year has blown by us in a hurry, and we find ourselves about to celebrate two of our favorite holidays: Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Thanksgiving might could be explained as the holiday of stuffing your face until you are about to pop (and then waiting awhile and stuffing it some more); and…
Christmas as the holiday of faking good behavior so Santa will give you gifts. (Or when you have gotten a bit too old for Santa, switching it to the holiday of using Santa to threaten others into fake good behavior!)

So (tongue-in-cheek) we might could call these two holidays our celebration of the sins of gluttony and deceit!

Just kidding… We know that this is not what these holidays are all about, but too often, we seem to head down a path that doesn’t embrace a truly thankful, giving spirit that these two holidays should point us toward. Too often we find ourselves with bad attitudes (and maybe even behavior) during this time of the year. We find ourselves with hurried attitudes similar to two of the people in Jesus’ story of the Good Samaritan: the priest and the Levite.
slightly blurred watch face symbolizing an inconvenient attitude of hurry
These two men should have provided kindness and mercy to the man in need, but they both failed to do so – perhaps because it was too inconvenient to do so in the busyness of their day.

J. I. Packer says: “It is our shame and disgrace today that so many Christians — I will be more specific: so many of the soundest and most orthodox Christians — go through this world in the spirit of the priest and the Levite in our Lord’s parable, seeing human needs all around them, but (after a pious wish, and perhaps a prayer, that God might meet those needs) averting their eyes and passing by on the other side. That is not the Christmas spirit. Nor is it the spirit of those Christians — alas, they are many — whose ambition in life seems limited to building a nice middle-class Christian home, and making nice middle-class Christian friends, and bringing up their children in nice middle-class Christian ways, and who leave the submiddle-class sections of the community, Christian and non-Christian, to get on by themselves.
…The Christmas spirit does not shine out in the Christian snob. For the Christmas spirit is the spirit of those who, like their Master, live their whole lives on the principle of making themselves poor — spending and being spent — to enrich their fellow humans, giving time, trouble, care and concern, to do good to others — and not just their own friends — in whatever way there seems need.”

These words from Packer hit me pretty hard, as I consider my own behavior during this holiday season. I don’t like doing things that are inconvenient to me. And Helping Others is Usually Inconvenient! But that doesn’t give me (or any Christian) the right to Just Ignore Them.

And what I discover is that I am so busy with my plans, that anything “extra” that comes along during a day is pretty inconvenient – just like the beaten man was for the priest and Levite. Will I be willing to “spend and be spent” to enrich the lives of those who aren’t my friends and family this December? What will I do this holiday season to move away from the attitude of the “Christian snob” and live more like Jesus who gave His time, care, and concern to do good to others – even when it was inconvenient for Him? God, change my heart, change my attitude, change my behavior. Help me to “slow down” and stop feeling inconvenienced by others, and instead to realize that I have an opportunity to speak to others about You in each unexpected encounter.

        (Quotes in today’s post are from Knowing God by J. I. Packer)