Archive - April, 2009

Leaving America

I’ve spent most of the last five years living in the United States. Yes, I travelled from there  – some times for large chunks of time – but I had always thought that ‘going home’ required me to place my index finger on the little screen and grin at the camera on the border. I no longer thought of England as my home, merely the home of my family.

And now I have returned to England. Despite picking the worst time to travel with oversize and excess baggage I have made it back to the south-west. When travelling back to England to visit I would invariably be hit by questions from well-meaning friends about America, some of whom had visited the country and others who have yet to. Some stereotypes are true – yes, many Americans are overweight (but hey, while you’re looking that way, take a look at our own children these days), but many ideas about America were grossly unfair.

I have found that my time in the States has afforded me a much broader view of the world. As a result my politics, theology, worldview etc. – my positions on many things have changed. I can see many more flaws in my own nation – which is a wonderful blessing of travelling – and realise that so much of the finger-pointing is an act of oversight from people not willing to look at their own nation’s issues!

I could write at length about this area, but my daily reading took me to this post from Peter Hitchens on his recent return from America. Mr. Hitchen’s skills of the written word far exceed my own and so I direct you to him to hear what another Englishman with a fondness for the old colonies has to say.

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Five Myths about Calvinism

I’ve just come across this post – Five Myths about Calvinism – and found more food for thought about the benefits of understanding many of Calvin’s principles. At the beginning of the article C. H. Spurgeon is quoted:

“There is no soul living who holds more firmly to the doctrines of grace than I do, and if any man asks me whether I am ashamed to be called a Calvinist, I answer – I wish to be called nothing but a Christian; but if you ask me, do I hold the doctrinal views which were held by John Calvin, I reply, I do in the main hold them, and rejoice to avow it.”

Well said. And with that being said I thought the rest of article addresses several misconceptions of the label ‘Calvinism’ pretty well.

Find the article here.

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Stalin's Chicken: New video from CVM

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Mars Hill Church

Mars HillOn Sunday I had the privelge of attending Mars Hill Church in Seattle for the first time in person. As one who frequently listens to the podcasts it was a pleasure to visit the church and see first hand what goes on.

Walking into the Ballard campus I knew I was at Mars Hill straight away by the familiar branding and themes that pretty much encompassed everything. Finding my way to a seat the service began with a short time of worship followed by Pastor Mark preaching and then more worship, including communion and a chance to give. The sermon was top notch, as I’ve come to expect, and I left wondering how one man can preach the 4 or 5 times each Sunday, as well as every other commitment he keeps. Quite astounding.

Looking around I could see that many people were young and yes, there were many guys there (which is something that’s profoundly interesting to me as men in England don’t seem to like church that much, especially the younger ones). I was at the 11:15 service (there are several services across several campuses a day) and it wasn’t just all families – young people actually got out of bed to attend the service.

The literature I picked up had plenty of great information and I felt that if I were to stay in Seattle and make Mars Hill my church that I would be able to fit in very quickly. The ways to get connected were numerous and highlighted. I opted to fill in the visitor card which resulted with a voicemail that I found after touching down in Chicago saying thanks for getting in touch and telling me who to call if I want to find out more. I thought that was pretty neat!

I really enjoyed my time at Mars Hill and the time that I got spend in Seattle. It’s true, the city is a little weird, but then again I’ve spent quite a bit of time on the north-shore of Maui which is just as weird. But weird or not, people seem to be connecting with the gospel as it’s preached faithfully and repeatedly and so I praise God for that. Mars Hill has a vision of expanding to 50,000 members and I pray for their success. It’s a bold vision, but there are some bold people behind it. And as someone once said, “One on God’s side is a majority.”

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Open Theism

Open Theism seems to crop up from time to time in some form or another, unhappily so, in certain YWAM circles. I was reminded today of the problem of this way of thinking and some of the fruit that it leads to.

One of open theism’s strongest appeals is its claim to account for tragic human suffering in such a way that God is both blameless and caring. On the surface, this appeal appears strong. Upon examination, however, it is clear that open theism’s counsel is unbiblical, incoherent, and shallow. It is unbiblical insofar as it fails to account for the prevailing biblical vision of the God who reigns over human affairs and who ensures that his purposes are accomplished even through human wickedness and evil.

This and more from Adrian Warnock.

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New YWAM Maui Website

YWAM Maui

In my last few days working with YWAM Maui I have been helping to build the new website. Today we have gone live!

We think we’ve done a good job, so come take a look and find out more about YWAM Maui and what we do.

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Sweetly Broken

Happy Easter!

From death to life. From enemies to friends. From broken to restored. From hopeless to hopeful. From shame to grace. Easter is the time when Jesus fulfilled his mission to earth by defeating death and providing reconciliation for us to with the Father. History has never seen an event like it. You can ignore it, claim it to be a lie, make up stories to drown it out.

But it happened. And however which way you cut it the world is still defined by those three days almost 2,000 years ago.

Singing of the Cross

Jeremy Riddle’s song, Sweetly Broken, encapsulates the heart of Easter:

To the cross I look, to the cross I cling
Of its suffering I do drink
Of its work I do sing

For on it my Savior both bruised and crushed
Showed that God is love
And God is just

At the cross You beckon me
You draw me gently to my knees, and I am
Lost for words, so lost in love,
I’m sweetly broken, wholly surrendered

What a priceless gift, undeserved life
Have I been given
Through Christ crucified

You’ve called me out of death
You’ve called me into life
And I was under Your wrath
Now through the cross I’m reconciled

At the cross You beckon me
You draw me gently to my knees, and I am
Lost for words, so lost in love,
I’m sweetly broken, wholly surrendered

In awe of the cross I must confess
How wondrous Your redeeming love and
How great is Your faithfulness

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Solitude

Richard Foster’s chapter on Solitude, in Celebration of Discipline, contains many nuggets of truth that I’ve rediscovered in the last few days as I’ve set aside time to pray and listen to Jesus in quiet.

The disciplines are perhaps one of the most overlooked aspects of the Christian faith to the younger generation today. Patience, growth, and maturity are swept away in a culture where instant-gratification trumps all. If you can’t access something through a click or two then it’s not worth the effort.

Solitude, in this manner, is so often thrown out in a world increasingly beset with distractions. Entertainment, information: it’s everywhere and quite aside from conditioning our minds to think in media ‘bites’, it makes it hard to ‘drown it all out’ and quiet our souls before Jesus. Many people, in fact, don’t like the idea at all of having to ‘do nothing’. However, solitude is a vitally important discipline and we can’t ignore it.

“[We] must seek out the recreating stillness of solitude if we want to be with others meangingfully. We must seek the fellowship of others if we want to be alone safely. We must cultivate both if we are to live in obedience.”

It’s not that the extroverts love to hang out with others, and the introverts retreat to the quiet place, but that all of us spend time in fellowship and in solitude. And we must be clear on what solitude is. It’s not simply finding the quietest place possible and just ‘being’, but rather it’s a proactive attitude of placing Jesus first and letting Him speak above all else.

Choosing the Right Words

Words are so incredibly important. Our words can bring life, or bring death. We can chose to honour God or dishonour Him with what our tongues speak out. So often we can find that we say something, only to wish that we hadn’t. Or, also, at the same time, not say something that we really wish we had. Foster tells us what Dietrich Bonhoeffer has to say about keeping our tongues in check:

“Real silence, real stillness, really holding one’s tongue comes only as the sober consequence of spiritual stillness.”

The flip side of this is that we clam up and keep completely quiet. But Thomas à Kempis says this:

“It is easier to be silent altogether than to speak with moderation.”

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Marriage and Men

Can I encourage all men to watch this?

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Worship and Trials

“If a burden and its resulting pressure come upon us while we are not in an attitude of worship, it will only produce a hardness toward God and despair in our own souls.” – Oswald Chambers

Last year I went through I and II Peter with the staff at YWAM Maui. This year I’m going through them again, thanks to the current series from Mars Hill. If you haven’t spent much time in these two books, I’d encourage you to as they’re incredibly rich in insight for how to live out our faith.

The short of it is that trials will come at us. Some times those trials will be, well, trying! To diminish them is often to live in denial. To deny that a Christian should experience trials at all is outright heresy, and a complete misreading of the Bible. Jesus himself said that when we put His principles in place in our lives that we will face trials and persecution (Matthew 5:11,12).

Life can be humming along nicely and we may not be in the practice of worship. Aside from highlighting a misunderstanding of God, this bad habit can also set us up for failure. When trials come, and come they will, if we are not in the habit of worship then things can stop humming in tune very quickly.

It has also been my experience that one trial, no matter how severe, will not correct the bad habit of not being in the practice of worship. I had two fairly large battles last year. And the first one, medically related, took me out and caused me to question just how firm my personal relationship with the Lord was. And did I learn? It took another large disorientating wave to knock me off of my feet at the end of the year, this time crushing my pride fairly well (tip, if you give you life to the Lord and don’t surrender your pride it will hurt when he sanctifies that part of you!), to realise that quite apart from Jesus deserving worship at all times I was built to worship Him in relationship with Him. This is the life giving part of the deal, and will put is in a position to handle the trials well.

When we suffer well, we represent Jesus well. When we take the knocks and still praise Him, we become more like Him. We need to worship Jesus, even rejoicing in the tough times (1 Peter 1:6). His grace is huge. When we worship Jesus for who He is, Jesus gets brighter, sin gets darker and his grace appears more powerful to us.

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