from the latin, brevis - short or concise observations about culture, faith, books and things that matter.
Saturday, January 28, 2012
The Simplicity and Humility of Jesus (Scougal updated)
The third branch of this spiritual reality is simplicity, which remember, is being less enthralled with earthly pleasures and having an iron resolve in tough times to obey the Lord. If there was ever a person who was truly dead to the world, it was Jesus, who did not run from the enjoyments of life, but never made it his ambition to pursue them. Though Jesus allowed others the joys of marriage and even blessed such occasions with his presence, he chose an unmarried life. Though he provided wine for the joy of others, he did not seek to satisfy his own hunger in the wilderness testing. So gracious was the heart of Christ in allowing others to enjoy what he denied himself, he supplied not just the needs of others, but gave small things for their enjoyment. We often hear of the sorrow of Jesus, but not of his laughter. He once rejoiced in his spirit, but the whole of his life was one characterized by Isaiah, as “a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief” (Isaiah 53:3).
The troubles of his life were of his own choosing, for no one else ever appeared on the stage of world history with such great advantage, so as to multiply the catch of fish or bring out coins from their mouths. He could have easily have become the wealthiest person in the world, if he so desired. He could have marshaled an army strong enough to topple Caesar from power. And having fed thousands from a few loaves and small fishes, he did not seek to find fulfillment in this life.
"Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head." (Matthew 8:20)
Most of his companions were not the rich and powerful, but the poor and the outcasts of society.
Considering the Humility of Jesus
And now the final branch of the tree we are calling true spirituality. It is humility, which Jesus is the prime example, for we are to “learn from him, for he is gentle and lowly in heart” (Matthew 11:29).
Beyond the infinite condescension of the eternal Son of God in taking on our human nature, we should focus on his life while he walked this earth. He had none of those faults and foibles that make the rest of us, so to speak, humble. He was completely overwhelmed with the awareness of God’s perfections, that he gave little thought to himself as far as being a man. He considered his own perfect nature, not as his own possession, but as a gift of God. He was without pretension or arrogance even in knowing He was divine. For example, when he was addressed as the “Good Teacher”, he seemed to give no reference to his divine nature when he replied, “Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone” (Luke 18:19).
He emphasized that any goodness found in anyone is not worthy of any notice since God alone is the source of all that is good. He never used his power to perform miracles to be noticed. He refused to gratify the curiosity of the Jews with signs and ignored the advice of the crowd to garner great fame. Only out of love did he bring relief to the suffering and often in what we may call a hidden miracle. The times his miracles were witnessed by many, he was always giving glory to His Father, as “if in himself he was able to do nothing” (John 5:19,30).
Furthermore, Jesus showed humility in refusing to be made an earthly king, in his obedience to his parents, and in his endurance in the face of his enemies. If one were to study every detail of his life it would be a school in true humility. But now let me interrupt this very wordy letter with a prayer that knowing more about this true spirituality, it may become more of a reality in your life.
Great God, what a mighty faith we have been called to. How gracious are you to join our duty to our joy and so design our reward to be in the performance of our work. Can we who are nothing be brought up to such heights? Allow us to lift our eyes to you. Will you receive the affections of our hearts? Might we rejoice in your perfections and majesty by gazing upon them, and receiving your blessings by simply loving You? Oh, the true joy of those who have broken the chains of self-love, and be liberated from every lesser good or purpose, having their minds enlightened by the Holy Spirit, and their wills so enlarged as to love You above all things, and love others for Your sake. I am convinced, O God, I am so convinced that I can never be happy, until I am truly dead to desires and loves of this world, and cease to think about myself. Oh, when shall that time come? Oh, will You even now come to me and satisfy this longing to be more like You, to be holy like You, in all aspects of my living? Having given me the hope of such a promise, will you hold it from me now? Now that you have given me this inward desire, will you not satisfy it? Oh, teach me to do your will, for you are my God, your Spirit is good, and so lead me in the way of righteousness. Renew my life, O Lord, for your Name’s sake, and complete your work in me. For your mercy endures forever, forsake not the work you have begun in me. Amen.
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Why Christianity Offers the Best Answer
The new challenge of Post-modern society is pluralism. Globalization is a reality in this new cultural shift. There are many religious options open for people today. The old challenge in the modern scientific world was the threat of secularization. This was the attempt to dismiss anything in the realm of faith or the supernatural as it relates to fields of knowledge and truth. As been noted by many philosophers, ideas have real consequences. Here are a few quotes to clear away the clutter of fuzzy thinking.
“A society in which any kind of nonsense is acceptable is not a free society. An agnostic pluralism has no defense against nonsense.”
- Bishop Lesslie Newbigin, Truth To Tell
"The worst moment for an atheist is when he is genuinely thankful, but has nobody to thank." - Dante Gabriel Rossetti
"To the Buddhist good and evil are relative and not absolute terms"
- Christmas Humphreys, Buddhism
"Atheism is a cruel, long-term business: I beleive I have gone through it to the end."
- Jean Paul Sarte, Words
"God is dead and nothing will be the same."
- Friedich Nietzsche, 19th century philosopher
The true test for Christian faith is the ability is has to transform individuals and society for the good. The proof of the pudding is in its eating.
"By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another."
- Jesus, John 13:35
"If we would bring the Turks to Christianity, we must first be Christians."
-Erasmus
"Christianity might be a good thing if anyone ever tried it."
- George Bernard Shaw
“A society in which any kind of nonsense is acceptable is not a free society. An agnostic pluralism has no defense against nonsense.”
- Bishop Lesslie Newbigin, Truth To Tell
"The worst moment for an atheist is when he is genuinely thankful, but has nobody to thank." - Dante Gabriel Rossetti
"To the Buddhist good and evil are relative and not absolute terms"
- Christmas Humphreys, Buddhism
"Atheism is a cruel, long-term business: I beleive I have gone through it to the end."
- Jean Paul Sarte, Words
"God is dead and nothing will be the same."
- Friedich Nietzsche, 19th century philosopher
The true test for Christian faith is the ability is has to transform individuals and society for the good. The proof of the pudding is in its eating.
"By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another."
- Jesus, John 13:35
"If we would bring the Turks to Christianity, we must first be Christians."
-Erasmus
"Christianity might be a good thing if anyone ever tried it."
- George Bernard Shaw
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
"Cross Words" by Paul Wells (Crossway Books)
There is a tendency in some corners of the Reformed community to diminish the full reality of the extent in which Jesus Christ, who being fully God, underwent the white-hot wrath of God’s judgment. Some with the best of intentions want to safeguard the unity of God’s being, think that it is logically impossible for the Son of God to suffer the unthinkable separation from the Father’s presence. Yet, God does not need us to defend his nature when it comes to the deep mystery of the Cross. We simply cannot fathom the depth of God’s love nor understand the wrath His Son endured. This does not make it irrational; it merely stretches the limits of our reason.
Paul Wells is a welcomed new voice in Reformed theology who underscores the wonder of this mystery in a recent book defending the traditional biblical doctrine of the atonement. Recently I was moved to tears and worship as I read this in his book, “Cross Words.” I commend them to the enrichment of your soul.
“How agonizing it must have been for the Son of God to feel the pain of divine rejection because of his identity with sinners in judgment! The abandonment of Christ corresponds to a descent into hell, as Christ knows full well that the Father only rejects the wicked. ‘He was suffering the pains of hell. What the Father wanted to say to the Son was this: Have you desired to suffer the passion of hell? Then you must do so fully aware that you are doing so.’ He tastes the bitterest anguish as looking to God in faith, love, and trust, he finds that he is not saved from the ordeal. His heart yearns for the communion and the glory he shared with the Father before the world was (John 17:5) and all the time he has ringing in his ears ‘Esau have I hated’! (Rom.9:13).
For three terrible hours Christ knew the pangs of hell as if he were a sinner under the lash of divine judgment. ‘This cry is like the lamentation of those who are abandoned for ever.’ Tormented by the astonishment of finding himself in hell without belonging there, Christ strains for heaven but is transfixed by the divine condemnation he undergoes…He descended into our hell to break its power. ‘Dying on the cross, forsaken by his Father…it was damnation- and damnation taken lovingly.’” (Paul Wells, Cross Words. Christian Focus Books: Scotland, 1996, p.163).
Commenting on this book, Peter Jones, says “Satisfying to your mind, this is also a text that will move you to tears and to praise.” I cannot agree more. Perhaps one reason our praise and worship is so shallow and cold at times, is because we do not ponder the depth of this profound truth of Christ’s suffering for us.
A prayer of St. Ambrose (390-397 A.D.)
O Lord, who has mercy upon all, take away from me my sins, and mercifully kindle in me the fire of Thy Holy Spirit. Take away from me the heart of stone, and give me a heart of flesh, a heart to love and adore Thee, a heart to delight in Thee, to follow and to enjoy Thee, for Christ’s sake. Amen.
Paul Wells is a welcomed new voice in Reformed theology who underscores the wonder of this mystery in a recent book defending the traditional biblical doctrine of the atonement. Recently I was moved to tears and worship as I read this in his book, “Cross Words.” I commend them to the enrichment of your soul.
“How agonizing it must have been for the Son of God to feel the pain of divine rejection because of his identity with sinners in judgment! The abandonment of Christ corresponds to a descent into hell, as Christ knows full well that the Father only rejects the wicked. ‘He was suffering the pains of hell. What the Father wanted to say to the Son was this: Have you desired to suffer the passion of hell? Then you must do so fully aware that you are doing so.’ He tastes the bitterest anguish as looking to God in faith, love, and trust, he finds that he is not saved from the ordeal. His heart yearns for the communion and the glory he shared with the Father before the world was (John 17:5) and all the time he has ringing in his ears ‘Esau have I hated’! (Rom.9:13).
For three terrible hours Christ knew the pangs of hell as if he were a sinner under the lash of divine judgment. ‘This cry is like the lamentation of those who are abandoned for ever.’ Tormented by the astonishment of finding himself in hell without belonging there, Christ strains for heaven but is transfixed by the divine condemnation he undergoes…He descended into our hell to break its power. ‘Dying on the cross, forsaken by his Father…it was damnation- and damnation taken lovingly.’” (Paul Wells, Cross Words. Christian Focus Books: Scotland, 1996, p.163).
Commenting on this book, Peter Jones, says “Satisfying to your mind, this is also a text that will move you to tears and to praise.” I cannot agree more. Perhaps one reason our praise and worship is so shallow and cold at times, is because we do not ponder the depth of this profound truth of Christ’s suffering for us.
A prayer of St. Ambrose (390-397 A.D.)
O Lord, who has mercy upon all, take away from me my sins, and mercifully kindle in me the fire of Thy Holy Spirit. Take away from me the heart of stone, and give me a heart of flesh, a heart to love and adore Thee, a heart to delight in Thee, to follow and to enjoy Thee, for Christ’s sake. Amen.
Monday, January 9, 2012
The Rememberance of the Missionary Martyrs of Ecuador
January 9, 1956
On this very day, deep in the jungles of Ecuador in 1956, five young American men were speared to death, becoming martyrs for Christ, launching a great missionary drive to share the gospel with an unreached hostile Indian tribe. What the world and Time magazine heralded as a tragic loss and perhaps a waste, God used to transform an entire tribe with the life changing message of Jesus Christ. The inspiring story of Jim Elliot, Nate Saint, Pete Fleming, Ed McCully and Roger Youderian told in Elizabeth Eliot’s book, Through the Gates of Splendor, is retold in a major motion picture entitled, The End of the Spear. A little known film company called Every Tribe Entertainment produced this movie based on the miraculous events of a love for Christ so uncommon that it is a modern day missionary triumph. Of course the triumph is the glory of the Gospel that can transform any culture, tribe or people.
In a day when most Americans are spoon fed a steady diet of revisionist histories of Christian missionaries, it is commonly held that wicked Western values are imposed on happy peaceful indigenous peoples, and that missionaries are bad hold-over’s from patronizing colonizers. Just remember the movie “South Pacific” or recent bestseller, The Poisonwood Bible, and you get the picture that missionaries are a bad idea.
Evangelical Christians need not be ashamed of the history of missions. It is not an unblemished story, but overwhelmingly it is a story of how dedicated souls have brought not only a message of spiritual salvation, but cultural advancement and many times cultural dignity and identity. Evangelical Missionaries have been at the forefront of tribal rights and preserving indigenous cultural identity. Nothing does this more than the painstaking translation of the Scriptures from an unwritten language. The Gospel transforms cannibals into loving communities of Christian tribesmen. The byproduct of the Gospel is a transformed culture not an obliterated one.
This movie may be a great opportunity to share with an unbelieving friend that there is something about the Christian message that is inexplicable except for the fact that in the words of the missionary theologian, Lesslie Newbigin, it is “public truth.” The Gospel is truth that is absolute for every time, for every person, in every culture. Truth sets us free. It is why we do missions and will continue to do so until Jesus returns. Thank God for missionaries whose lamps shine brightly the light of the gospel, may their number increase.
For this is what the Lord has commanded us:
" `I have made you a light for the Gentiles,
that you may bring salvation to the ends of the earth.' " Acts 13:47
On this very day, deep in the jungles of Ecuador in 1956, five young American men were speared to death, becoming martyrs for Christ, launching a great missionary drive to share the gospel with an unreached hostile Indian tribe. What the world and Time magazine heralded as a tragic loss and perhaps a waste, God used to transform an entire tribe with the life changing message of Jesus Christ. The inspiring story of Jim Elliot, Nate Saint, Pete Fleming, Ed McCully and Roger Youderian told in Elizabeth Eliot’s book, Through the Gates of Splendor, is retold in a major motion picture entitled, The End of the Spear. A little known film company called Every Tribe Entertainment produced this movie based on the miraculous events of a love for Christ so uncommon that it is a modern day missionary triumph. Of course the triumph is the glory of the Gospel that can transform any culture, tribe or people.
In a day when most Americans are spoon fed a steady diet of revisionist histories of Christian missionaries, it is commonly held that wicked Western values are imposed on happy peaceful indigenous peoples, and that missionaries are bad hold-over’s from patronizing colonizers. Just remember the movie “South Pacific” or recent bestseller, The Poisonwood Bible, and you get the picture that missionaries are a bad idea.
Evangelical Christians need not be ashamed of the history of missions. It is not an unblemished story, but overwhelmingly it is a story of how dedicated souls have brought not only a message of spiritual salvation, but cultural advancement and many times cultural dignity and identity. Evangelical Missionaries have been at the forefront of tribal rights and preserving indigenous cultural identity. Nothing does this more than the painstaking translation of the Scriptures from an unwritten language. The Gospel transforms cannibals into loving communities of Christian tribesmen. The byproduct of the Gospel is a transformed culture not an obliterated one.
This movie may be a great opportunity to share with an unbelieving friend that there is something about the Christian message that is inexplicable except for the fact that in the words of the missionary theologian, Lesslie Newbigin, it is “public truth.” The Gospel is truth that is absolute for every time, for every person, in every culture. Truth sets us free. It is why we do missions and will continue to do so until Jesus returns. Thank God for missionaries whose lamps shine brightly the light of the gospel, may their number increase.
For this is what the Lord has commanded us:
" `I have made you a light for the Gentiles,
that you may bring salvation to the ends of the earth.' " Acts 13:47
Friday, January 6, 2012
The Flying Scotsman – Eric Liddell (1902-1945)
“Jesus shall reign wher-e’re the sun does his successive journeys run;
his kingdom stretch from shore to shore, till moons shall wax and wane no more.”
One of my all time favorite movies is Chariots of Fire, which tells the story of Eric Liddell, the famous Olympian runner from Scotland and missionary to China. Nicknamed the “Flying Scotsman”, Liddell had a wild-looking way of running with his head back and arms flailing in the air. But, when he ran he felt the “pleasure of God”, because God had made him fast. Eric knew that God had a greater purpose for his life than to be a great Olympic runner, winning the gold in the 400 meter race in the 1924 Olympics in Paris. He had a clear call to serve the Lord in China. Eric was the son of missionaries in China, who faced the Boxer rebellion and dedicated their lives to bringing the Gospel to Mongolia and Northern China. Eric and his brother Rob were raised in a boarding school in London. Eric went on to study at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, where he was a noted rugby player and runner. His national fame as an athlete opened many doors for him to share the Gospel.
Yet, Eric was more than a man of popular fame in athletics or as a Christian celebrity. The movie did an excellent job of highlighting the great challenge he faced when he heard that the qualifying heat and four events in which he was to represent Britain fell upon a Sunday. What the movie did not tell, was this was known well in advance of boarding to ship to France and Eric let it be known he was not going to run on Sunday as he said, “God’s fourth commandment to Moses said to remember the Sabbath Day to keep in holy. If I run in a race that honors me or other men, I am not remembering God’s Sabbath. And if I start ignoring one of God’s commands, I may as well ignore all of them. But I can’t do that because I love God too much.” ( from Heroes of Faith Series)
Quickly the national hero of Britain was derided as a traitor. People on the streets made fun of his faith and cursed his presumption to put Christ before country. One paper declared Eric a “Traitor to Scottish Sporting”. I don’t know if the movie was historically accurate in the scene where Eric was being drilled by the British elites to change his mind, but it was true to his commitment and Presbyterian fortitude. Liddell understood that allegiance to Christ and to God’s authority was above all – later assessments likened him to Rob Roy and William Wallace all rolled up in one. Surely he was a David standing against his Goliath. On the Sunday during the races, Liddell preached at the Scottish Kirk in Paris, honoring God. Eric was able to run later in a race for which he was not prepared nor favored to win. But win he did and set a world record that was unbroken for 35 years. Those “who honor God, He will honor”, was made clear in this man of great principle and spiritual depth.
The most enduring and unsung legacy was his years spent in China as a missionary to a small village. After the invasion of China by the Japanese in the outbreak of WWII, Liddell was confined to a prison camp with other missionaries. He died at the age of 43 from a brain tumor leaving a wife (Florence Mackenzie) and three daughters. Even though he died early in life and in obscurity, he had run his race, the most important race there is, and kept his eyes on the Savior he loved and the God who made him swift and fast.
– 19th Century Missionary Hymn by Mary Gates
“Send Thou, O Lord, to every place swift messengers before Thy face. The heralds of Thy wonderous grace, where Thou Thyself wilt come.
Send men whose eyes have seen the King, men in whose ears His sweet words ring;
Send such Thy lost ones home to bring; send them where Thou wilt come.
To bring good news to souls in sin, the bruised and broken hearts to win;
In every place to bring them in where Thou Thyself wilt come.
Gird each one with the Spirit’s sword, the sword of Thine own deathless Word;
And make them conquerors, conquering, Lord, Where Thou Thy-self wilt come.”
his kingdom stretch from shore to shore, till moons shall wax and wane no more.”
One of my all time favorite movies is Chariots of Fire, which tells the story of Eric Liddell, the famous Olympian runner from Scotland and missionary to China. Nicknamed the “Flying Scotsman”, Liddell had a wild-looking way of running with his head back and arms flailing in the air. But, when he ran he felt the “pleasure of God”, because God had made him fast. Eric knew that God had a greater purpose for his life than to be a great Olympic runner, winning the gold in the 400 meter race in the 1924 Olympics in Paris. He had a clear call to serve the Lord in China. Eric was the son of missionaries in China, who faced the Boxer rebellion and dedicated their lives to bringing the Gospel to Mongolia and Northern China. Eric and his brother Rob were raised in a boarding school in London. Eric went on to study at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, where he was a noted rugby player and runner. His national fame as an athlete opened many doors for him to share the Gospel.
Yet, Eric was more than a man of popular fame in athletics or as a Christian celebrity. The movie did an excellent job of highlighting the great challenge he faced when he heard that the qualifying heat and four events in which he was to represent Britain fell upon a Sunday. What the movie did not tell, was this was known well in advance of boarding to ship to France and Eric let it be known he was not going to run on Sunday as he said, “God’s fourth commandment to Moses said to remember the Sabbath Day to keep in holy. If I run in a race that honors me or other men, I am not remembering God’s Sabbath. And if I start ignoring one of God’s commands, I may as well ignore all of them. But I can’t do that because I love God too much.” ( from Heroes of Faith Series)
Quickly the national hero of Britain was derided as a traitor. People on the streets made fun of his faith and cursed his presumption to put Christ before country. One paper declared Eric a “Traitor to Scottish Sporting”. I don’t know if the movie was historically accurate in the scene where Eric was being drilled by the British elites to change his mind, but it was true to his commitment and Presbyterian fortitude. Liddell understood that allegiance to Christ and to God’s authority was above all – later assessments likened him to Rob Roy and William Wallace all rolled up in one. Surely he was a David standing against his Goliath. On the Sunday during the races, Liddell preached at the Scottish Kirk in Paris, honoring God. Eric was able to run later in a race for which he was not prepared nor favored to win. But win he did and set a world record that was unbroken for 35 years. Those “who honor God, He will honor”, was made clear in this man of great principle and spiritual depth.
The most enduring and unsung legacy was his years spent in China as a missionary to a small village. After the invasion of China by the Japanese in the outbreak of WWII, Liddell was confined to a prison camp with other missionaries. He died at the age of 43 from a brain tumor leaving a wife (Florence Mackenzie) and three daughters. Even though he died early in life and in obscurity, he had run his race, the most important race there is, and kept his eyes on the Savior he loved and the God who made him swift and fast.
– 19th Century Missionary Hymn by Mary Gates
“Send Thou, O Lord, to every place swift messengers before Thy face. The heralds of Thy wonderous grace, where Thou Thyself wilt come.
Send men whose eyes have seen the King, men in whose ears His sweet words ring;
Send such Thy lost ones home to bring; send them where Thou wilt come.
To bring good news to souls in sin, the bruised and broken hearts to win;
In every place to bring them in where Thou Thyself wilt come.
Gird each one with the Spirit’s sword, the sword of Thine own deathless Word;
And make them conquerors, conquering, Lord, Where Thou Thy-self wilt come.”
Why Short Term Missions Matter
By Todd Baucum, D.Min.
First Presbyterian Church, Enterprise, AL PCA
Constructing bars for Tequila sippers in Mexico is not what a group of teenagers from north of the border had in mind when they went with their church on a mission trip. I can still remember my college professor telling us in our missions class how lots of church building projects in Latin America end up not as churches but eventually fall into the hands of unscrupulous businessmen selling their liquor or other contraband. My professor, I believe, was engaging in a bit of dramatic hyperbole, but his sentiment towards youth dominated mission trips was well noted. This thought has stayed on my mind over the years as I have been on short term mission trips. Now decades later, as a pastor and ceaseless promoter of overseas missions in the congregations I’ve served, I have come to believe that short terms missions is worth doing. Of course it is also worth doing well. There is, to be sure, much that is wrong with the thousands of trips that leave U.S. airports to exotic locations around the world. Mission trips done badly are a disgrace to the Church and a disservice to career missionaries who must mop up afterwards. But bad trips and poorly planned STM’s are not reasons to judge them all as hurtful or bad stewardship of limited funds. I believe this so strongly, that it was the basis of my doctoral dissertation. We ought not to be laying concrete blocks for worldly pursuits, nor should we be bringing spoiled teens into the developing world, for a taste of how good they really have it back home. There is much to avoid in this ministry that like anything else in American Christianity where the true focus can be lost. Let us not throw out the baby with the bath water of distasteful examples of the American, brick laying, “get me to Jamaica” adolescent.
Here are few of my reflections that I glean from the work I did in completing my doctorate several years ago. Why are Short term Missions valuable? I can sum it up in four reasons.
Reason One: It Enlarges Your View of the World.
Even a person who is well read and educated can benefit from traveling to another culture to be challenged by someone else’s way of life and view of doing things. Anthropologists define culture as that which filters everything we do, think, and perceive about life. It is a bit like looking at something through a lens, and saying the lens is what one means by culture. We don’t see culture; it is just something we see through without knowing it. In a sense, culture is more like the cornea on the eyeball, rather than spectacles or contacts. We know we put contacts on and at night remove them, even if at times we don’t think about wearing them. So culture is more a part of our non-rational selves, most of us don’t ever assume anything else. Once we are put into a different culture than our own, we either clam up with self-righteous fortitude and judge all failures to live up to our culture’s standards of thinking, doing and living, or we adjust, learn and grow with another’s point of view – of seeing things. In the latter, we begin to appreciate the differences in another culture and how one culture is not superior but only different. This is not to say there is no room for judgment, there are weaknesses and strengths in all cultures. The Christian is one who must see how the Gospel is addressing every culture, even one’s own in light of the Lordship of Christ. Engagement in another culture can give a Christian the tools to do this sort of self-evaluation in a more tacit manner, than merely reading the National Geographic.
Reason Two: It Enlarges Your World-View
Secondly, a short term mission trip can provide a catalyst to rethinking your own faith and life views. In this way, a missions trip can be thought of a “cultural apologetics” at a slant. Building upon the thinking of the missionary theologian, Lesslie Newbigin, short term missions can provide a means of reverse missions, allowing preconceived ideas about what Christianity is all about to be tested in the laboratory of biblical thinking without cultural bias. In a sense it is an impossible task, because culture is like our own skin, but it is possible to critically think about the Gospel apart from our cultural bias. Indeed it is necessary to know where one stands in light of a complex world of cultures, religions and values. The Christian under the call to be obedient to Christ in all of life is to view one’s work, play, politics, and values from the filter of the Bible. Most Christians, if I can judge by my experience as a pastor, live with their grid calibrated along the lines of most unbelievers, reading the same books, watching the same movies and taking in the same viewpoints with little ability to filter these competing views through a biblical grid of truth. Too often we assume the filters of our own culture, even at times baptizing our own as “Christian”. But, it is possible with the help of Christians of another culture to think more “biblically” about our own culture, especially in those contexts where believers are living in a culture that is hostile to the Christian faith. When I talk to a Christian brother who lives in a Muslim part of Africa and faces ongoing threats to his life, I find a fresh understanding and perspective that corrects much of my own shallow discipleship and assumptions. Talk to a Christian in a land where food and good theology is rare and never taken for granted and you will get a sick feeling in your gut the next time you walk into a Christian bookstore in our country. Rub shoulders with poor humble saints in makeshift churches worshiping God and you will see your world and your faith in a different light. One can then begin to read the Bible in a different light as well. One begins to see, as Newbigin suggested, we in the postmodern West need the Gospel again.
Third Reason: It Makes Good Financial Sense
Perhaps this is the most controversial reason. Just look at the price tag of a mission trip, with airfares, lodging and food versus the vast need of resources in other countries, and it seems this is a no brainer. Let’s redirect this money for something far more necessary. But, if you look at this or any other ministry from this type of cost analysis then we could justify anything and dismiss most. It would seem that those who promote the view that this is bad stewardship need to take stock on how this sort of argument can be applied to any superfluous spending in their lives. Do any of them take a vacation? What is the amount of their monthly budget spent on entertainment or other selfish indulgences? No Christian should buy beer, cigars or play golf, if one wants to be consistent with this line of argument. I concede that many short term trips done badly should not be spending the moolah to underwrite their sophomoric adventures. There is waste that cannot be justified by any standard. But, we are not austere desert monks, nor are most Presbyterians I know ready to give up their vacations, or what they spend going to see their favorite sports team. The funds we use for our recreational reprieves can give us rest and respite from our daily grind, but money spent on a mission trip adds value to others and impact on the soul. I’ve heard John Piper indicate it was his desire that every member of his church go on at least one mission trip. That may be unrealistic in a practical sense, but it conveys the importance of connecting the Body of Christ here in North America with the world wide witness of the “catholic” Church and personal obedience to the Great Commission. It is proven that congregations that are involved in short term missions are also more giving to missions and have a passion for the world. The value of experiencing true Christian community in another culture with the language barrier, social barrier and racial barrier dissolved by the mystery of Christ’s Body and the presence of the Holy Spirit binding us into one is absolutely priceless.
Fourth Reason: Short Term Missions is Biblical
It may seem I have saved the high caliber fire for the last. The big gun is now drawn and there is little defense once the Bible is mentioned. How can one ever imagine given the time and place the early church lived as the outcast of the Roman Empire, that elders at Jerusalem would be sending hordes of teens on weeklong excursions to Cyprus or beyond? Forget the bad examples, and consider the missionary efforts of early Church. The third letter of the Apostle John can be called the forgotten epistle, as we are apt to slip over it so easily. The core of the message is really a biblical call to support the “adelphia” or brothers and sisters involved in itinerate ministries across the known world. Gauis was a man who knew the value of supporting this Gospel cause with hospitality and with monetary support so as “to send them on their journey in a manner worthy of God” (3 John 6). Consider even the missionary travels of the apostles and their companions. Paul stayed three years at Ephesus, which was the longest he spent anywhere, for his multiple long journeys across the Roman Empire, can be deemed in a sense “short term” mission projects. Missiologists are still puzzled at Paul’s method of church planting, but what is known is that this pattern of high mobility and cross fertilization of Christian witness, from soldiers, slaves to ordinary saints in the dispersia, the early church was constantly “going into the world” as a natural consequence of Roman life and multicultural exchange. Roman roads, a common tongue, and a common currency made it all possible. The world of the New Testament was like our world highly mobile. True their world was smaller geographically, but with our wide global expanse and the easy and affordable travel of today, our world is much smaller. We, more than any other generation have less excuse to know and to share in this global expansion of the Kingdom of Christ our Savior. Moreover, we have a biblical mandate and a biblical example to follow as we give our support to short term missions.
ResourcesPeterson, Roger and Timothy Peterson. Is Short-Term Mission Really Worth the Time and Money? Results of STEM Short-Term Mission Research. Minneapolis: STEM Press. 2nd Ed. 1991.
Newbigin, Lesslie. Foolishness to the Greeks: The Gospel and Western Culture. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans. 1986.
Allen, Roland. Missionary Methods: St. Paul or Ours? Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 1962.
First Presbyterian Church, Enterprise, AL PCA
Constructing bars for Tequila sippers in Mexico is not what a group of teenagers from north of the border had in mind when they went with their church on a mission trip. I can still remember my college professor telling us in our missions class how lots of church building projects in Latin America end up not as churches but eventually fall into the hands of unscrupulous businessmen selling their liquor or other contraband. My professor, I believe, was engaging in a bit of dramatic hyperbole, but his sentiment towards youth dominated mission trips was well noted. This thought has stayed on my mind over the years as I have been on short term mission trips. Now decades later, as a pastor and ceaseless promoter of overseas missions in the congregations I’ve served, I have come to believe that short terms missions is worth doing. Of course it is also worth doing well. There is, to be sure, much that is wrong with the thousands of trips that leave U.S. airports to exotic locations around the world. Mission trips done badly are a disgrace to the Church and a disservice to career missionaries who must mop up afterwards. But bad trips and poorly planned STM’s are not reasons to judge them all as hurtful or bad stewardship of limited funds. I believe this so strongly, that it was the basis of my doctoral dissertation. We ought not to be laying concrete blocks for worldly pursuits, nor should we be bringing spoiled teens into the developing world, for a taste of how good they really have it back home. There is much to avoid in this ministry that like anything else in American Christianity where the true focus can be lost. Let us not throw out the baby with the bath water of distasteful examples of the American, brick laying, “get me to Jamaica” adolescent.
Here are few of my reflections that I glean from the work I did in completing my doctorate several years ago. Why are Short term Missions valuable? I can sum it up in four reasons.
Reason One: It Enlarges Your View of the World.
Even a person who is well read and educated can benefit from traveling to another culture to be challenged by someone else’s way of life and view of doing things. Anthropologists define culture as that which filters everything we do, think, and perceive about life. It is a bit like looking at something through a lens, and saying the lens is what one means by culture. We don’t see culture; it is just something we see through without knowing it. In a sense, culture is more like the cornea on the eyeball, rather than spectacles or contacts. We know we put contacts on and at night remove them, even if at times we don’t think about wearing them. So culture is more a part of our non-rational selves, most of us don’t ever assume anything else. Once we are put into a different culture than our own, we either clam up with self-righteous fortitude and judge all failures to live up to our culture’s standards of thinking, doing and living, or we adjust, learn and grow with another’s point of view – of seeing things. In the latter, we begin to appreciate the differences in another culture and how one culture is not superior but only different. This is not to say there is no room for judgment, there are weaknesses and strengths in all cultures. The Christian is one who must see how the Gospel is addressing every culture, even one’s own in light of the Lordship of Christ. Engagement in another culture can give a Christian the tools to do this sort of self-evaluation in a more tacit manner, than merely reading the National Geographic.
Reason Two: It Enlarges Your World-View
Secondly, a short term mission trip can provide a catalyst to rethinking your own faith and life views. In this way, a missions trip can be thought of a “cultural apologetics” at a slant. Building upon the thinking of the missionary theologian, Lesslie Newbigin, short term missions can provide a means of reverse missions, allowing preconceived ideas about what Christianity is all about to be tested in the laboratory of biblical thinking without cultural bias. In a sense it is an impossible task, because culture is like our own skin, but it is possible to critically think about the Gospel apart from our cultural bias. Indeed it is necessary to know where one stands in light of a complex world of cultures, religions and values. The Christian under the call to be obedient to Christ in all of life is to view one’s work, play, politics, and values from the filter of the Bible. Most Christians, if I can judge by my experience as a pastor, live with their grid calibrated along the lines of most unbelievers, reading the same books, watching the same movies and taking in the same viewpoints with little ability to filter these competing views through a biblical grid of truth. Too often we assume the filters of our own culture, even at times baptizing our own as “Christian”. But, it is possible with the help of Christians of another culture to think more “biblically” about our own culture, especially in those contexts where believers are living in a culture that is hostile to the Christian faith. When I talk to a Christian brother who lives in a Muslim part of Africa and faces ongoing threats to his life, I find a fresh understanding and perspective that corrects much of my own shallow discipleship and assumptions. Talk to a Christian in a land where food and good theology is rare and never taken for granted and you will get a sick feeling in your gut the next time you walk into a Christian bookstore in our country. Rub shoulders with poor humble saints in makeshift churches worshiping God and you will see your world and your faith in a different light. One can then begin to read the Bible in a different light as well. One begins to see, as Newbigin suggested, we in the postmodern West need the Gospel again.
Third Reason: It Makes Good Financial Sense
Perhaps this is the most controversial reason. Just look at the price tag of a mission trip, with airfares, lodging and food versus the vast need of resources in other countries, and it seems this is a no brainer. Let’s redirect this money for something far more necessary. But, if you look at this or any other ministry from this type of cost analysis then we could justify anything and dismiss most. It would seem that those who promote the view that this is bad stewardship need to take stock on how this sort of argument can be applied to any superfluous spending in their lives. Do any of them take a vacation? What is the amount of their monthly budget spent on entertainment or other selfish indulgences? No Christian should buy beer, cigars or play golf, if one wants to be consistent with this line of argument. I concede that many short term trips done badly should not be spending the moolah to underwrite their sophomoric adventures. There is waste that cannot be justified by any standard. But, we are not austere desert monks, nor are most Presbyterians I know ready to give up their vacations, or what they spend going to see their favorite sports team. The funds we use for our recreational reprieves can give us rest and respite from our daily grind, but money spent on a mission trip adds value to others and impact on the soul. I’ve heard John Piper indicate it was his desire that every member of his church go on at least one mission trip. That may be unrealistic in a practical sense, but it conveys the importance of connecting the Body of Christ here in North America with the world wide witness of the “catholic” Church and personal obedience to the Great Commission. It is proven that congregations that are involved in short term missions are also more giving to missions and have a passion for the world. The value of experiencing true Christian community in another culture with the language barrier, social barrier and racial barrier dissolved by the mystery of Christ’s Body and the presence of the Holy Spirit binding us into one is absolutely priceless.
Fourth Reason: Short Term Missions is Biblical
It may seem I have saved the high caliber fire for the last. The big gun is now drawn and there is little defense once the Bible is mentioned. How can one ever imagine given the time and place the early church lived as the outcast of the Roman Empire, that elders at Jerusalem would be sending hordes of teens on weeklong excursions to Cyprus or beyond? Forget the bad examples, and consider the missionary efforts of early Church. The third letter of the Apostle John can be called the forgotten epistle, as we are apt to slip over it so easily. The core of the message is really a biblical call to support the “adelphia” or brothers and sisters involved in itinerate ministries across the known world. Gauis was a man who knew the value of supporting this Gospel cause with hospitality and with monetary support so as “to send them on their journey in a manner worthy of God” (3 John 6). Consider even the missionary travels of the apostles and their companions. Paul stayed three years at Ephesus, which was the longest he spent anywhere, for his multiple long journeys across the Roman Empire, can be deemed in a sense “short term” mission projects. Missiologists are still puzzled at Paul’s method of church planting, but what is known is that this pattern of high mobility and cross fertilization of Christian witness, from soldiers, slaves to ordinary saints in the dispersia, the early church was constantly “going into the world” as a natural consequence of Roman life and multicultural exchange. Roman roads, a common tongue, and a common currency made it all possible. The world of the New Testament was like our world highly mobile. True their world was smaller geographically, but with our wide global expanse and the easy and affordable travel of today, our world is much smaller. We, more than any other generation have less excuse to know and to share in this global expansion of the Kingdom of Christ our Savior. Moreover, we have a biblical mandate and a biblical example to follow as we give our support to short term missions.
ResourcesPeterson, Roger and Timothy Peterson. Is Short-Term Mission Really Worth the Time and Money? Results of STEM Short-Term Mission Research. Minneapolis: STEM Press. 2nd Ed. 1991.
Newbigin, Lesslie. Foolishness to the Greeks: The Gospel and Western Culture. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans. 1986.
Allen, Roland. Missionary Methods: St. Paul or Ours? Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 1962.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
The Bell Tower Alert
Dear Members and Friends,
Thursday, December 22, 2011
We have just met with our engineers and builder this morning in a special meeting to address the critical condition of our bell tower steeple. In short, it is structurally unsound. Termites have eaten the foundation of it and cannot be left as is. There are very few options. To build it right and keep in under current building codes, it will have to be totally rebuilt. Obviously, this was not a part of our initial plan or budget. Yet, we are evermore committed to giving God our best in this project and also doing what is best for future generations. This requires us to trust God more than ever, but we have to remember that anything done apart from faith is not pleasing to God (Hebrews 11:6).
Our session wants our congregation and friends of this church to know of this news so you can pray and also join us in restoring this bell tower and keeping its unique feature in our downtown skyscape. Very few churches have the dome and the cross on top of a copula like we have. For about 70 years this has been a sign of the rule and dominion of Jesus Christ over the world, beckoning others to come and worship Him. We are committed by faith to make sure this continues to be our message from the center of Enterprise reaching out to the world. Construction of the new addition and renovation of the existing sanctuary is schedule for the month of January. It is an exciting way to begin the New Year as we see major improvements begin to take place. The worship of our covenant keeping God in a way that honors Him is central to us.
The puritan John Flavel wrote these timely words, “Represent Christ to the world as he is, by your behavior towards him. Is he altogether lovely? Let all the world see and know that he is so, by your delights in him and communion with him; zeal for him, and readiness to part with any other lovely thing upon his account”. Pray and give as the Lord provides and may Christ be glorified.
For the Session – Pastor Todd
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