From the Interwebs (04/16/14)

Free eBook: John Piper’s Love to the Uttermost:

It is not too late to download a copy of John Piper’s Love to the Uttermost, a short devotional ebook for Holy Week. And while you’re at it, check out the related resources below the page. Desiring God has done a great job in compiling hundreds of free resources to help believers all over the world grow in their walk with God.

Carl Trueman on Tragic Worship:

The psalms as the staple of Christian worship have been too often replaced not by songs that capture the same sensibilities”as the many great hymns of the past did so well” but by those that assert triumph over death while never really giving death its due. The tomb is certainly empty; but we are not sure why it would ever have been occupied in the first place.

Peter Kreeft on Pascal and Our Addiction to Distraction:

We want to complexify our lives. We don’t have to, we want to. We wanted to be harried and hassled and busy. Unconsciously, we want the very things we complain about. For if we had leisure, we would look at ourselves and listen to our hearts and see the great gaping hold in our hearts and be terrified, because that hole is so big that nothing but God can fill it.

What Does the Phrase “I Am Your Inheritance” Mean?

A.W. Tozer:

When the Lord divided Canaan among the tribes of Israel Levi received no share of the land. God said to him simply, “I am thy part and thine inheritance,” and by those words made him richer than all his brethren, richer than all the kings and rajas who have ever lived in the world. And there is a spiritual principle here, a principle still valid for every priest of the Most High God.

The man who had God for his treasure has all things in One. Many ordinary treasures may be denied him, or if he is allowed to have them, the enjoyment of them will be so tempered that they will never be necessary to his happiness. Or if he must see them go, one after one, he will scarcely feel a sense of loss, for having the Source of all things he has in One all satisfaction, all pleasure, all delight. Whatever he may lose he has actually lost nothing, for he now has it all in One, and he has it purely, legitimately and forever.

Spurgeon on Affliction

Spurgeon on Affliction:

It would be a very sharp and trying experience to me to think that I have an affliction which God never sent me, that the bitter cup was never filled by his hand, that my trials were never measured out by him, nor sent to me by his arrangement of their weight and quantity. (Christian History, Issue 29, Vol. 10, No. 1, 25)

I dare say the greatest earthly blessing that God can give to any of us is health, with the exception of sickness… Affliction is the best bit of furniture in my house. It is the best book in a minister’s library. (An All Round Ministry)

God Owns All Places

I was thinking of Tacloban when I read this from Jared Wilson’s Gospel Deeps:

God owns all places, let’s not forget. “There is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence,” Abraham Kuyper reminds us, “over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: ‘Mine!’”

It is easy to lose heart among the ruins of any place, but there’s a heritage here, a history, even if to see it we must go all the way back before the fall to when God said this place was “good.”

From the Interwebs (03/12/14)

When Your Words Cry “Wolf”

Thank you Barnabas Piper for putting these into words:

Every day we read headlines offering us “essential”, “incredible”, or “unbelievable” something-or-other. If a description of anything doesn’t include a superlative it’s good for nothing. But what happens when we run out of superlatives and absolutes (if we haven’t already)? If everything is amazing nothing is. By definition, not everything can be the best or worst. If every piece of advice is essential and we can’t live without those life hacks, well we should just give up now; life is hopeless.

3 Ways Expository Preaching Combats Biblical Illiteracy

What can preachers do to address Biblical illiteracy in our churches? Eric McKiddie offers three reasons why expository preaching helps solve this problem.

Christians are decreasingly able to take what they know from the Bible and assimilate it into a thoroughly biblical worldview. Especially with folks under the age of thirty, a relativistic way of thinking is the default. Far too often someone reads the Bible or learns something in church, and naturally assimilates it into their secular worldview.

Continue reading From the Interwebs (03/12/14)

From the Interwebs (02/21/14)

The Never Ending Need to Multiply Volunteers

This coming weekend, Victory Metro Manila will have its annual volunteer weekend. Ed Stetzer’s blog post is timely:

Most pastors of churches want their churches to grow, and they recruit volunteers to enable it. They’re surprised, however, how quickly the demand for more rears its ugly head on the heels of victory. We get new volunteers and then we need new volunteers. So we get new volunteers, and then we need more new volunteers. It never goes away. If you want success, you better be prepared for the cycle that comes with it.

What Pastors Owe Their People

Daniel Darling:

Preaching styles do differ, but it’s hard to argue the unmistakeable responsibility of pastors to take the whole counsel of God and preach it faithfully. To not give our people spiritual food, to not share with them the “all the things I have commanded you” is to commit spiritual malpractice. It’s to intentionally leave our people spiritually malnourished.

Continue reading From the Interwebs (02/21/14)