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Attempts at Honesty

Reflections on the interplay of the Bible and Culture

  • Westminster Shorter Catechism Series
  • Sermon on the Mount Series
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It is necessary

Posted on December 11, 2015 Written by Mark McIntyre 2 Comments

NecessaryThe following is attributed to St. Francis of Assisi:

“Preach the gospel always, if necessary, use words.”

There are some who think that St. Francis never said this, but the popularity of the quote and the persistence in attribution to St. Francis remain.

St. Francis (or the mystery writer) rightly reminds us that our actions are important. The Apostle John provides a similar thought:

“Little children, let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth” (1 John 3:18).

The point is that our actions should lay a foundation so that when we do preach the gospel, we are credible. We cannot ask anyone to believe a gospel that has little or no positive effect on the preacher.

I borrow the following illustration from Howard Hendricks.

If you have seen my profile picture anywhere, you would know that I shave my head. I do so because if my hair grew out, my hairstyle would be in the style of an inverse mohawk. In other words, I would have nothing on the top and a little on the sides.

With that background in mind, would you buy hair restoration oil from me? Would you not rightly ask why it did not work for me? The lack of hair on my head belies the claims of efficacy of the product.

The danger is that we can carry this thought too far and assume that our actions alone are capable of conveying the gospel. They are not.

It is necessary to use words. While we may, by our actions, lead someone into being different on the outside, it is only the gospel that can change someone on the inside. The gospel that changes people on the inside must be conveyed in words.

Peter tells us that we should be “prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you” (1 Peter 3:15). This is an indication that displaying hope is not enough, words are required to explain the hope.

Words must be matched with appropriate action, but the words are indeed necessary (Tweet This).

 

Filed Under: Bible Reflection Tagged With: Gospel, necessary, preach, words

Even in our bad choices

Posted on December 7, 2015 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

Dead End ChoicesJoseph said this to his brothers after revealing his identity to them:

“So it was not you who sent me here, but God” (Genesis 45:8).

The lesson is that God was sovereign over the choices that the brothers made for Joseph; nothing that they did was outside the control of God. By inference, we can assume that in the same way, the choices that others make for use are also under God’s control.

But what about the choices we make for ourselves? Does it not stand to reason that God also knows about them and has considered them in his plan? Of course it does.

Why then do we beat ourselves up over the bad choices we have made? They were no surprise to God and he will use them to shape us into what he wants us to be.

Joseph teaches us that it is counter productive to burn calories over the bad choices of others, God anticipated them and used them to accomplish his plan. But should we not also learn that it is useless to get locked down in regret over our own choices? Remaining in regret is a dead end street (Tweet This).

History bears this out. Off the top of my head, the only Biblical hero that I can think of that doesn’t have something really embarrassing on his resume is Daniel. All the rest did things which would merit the attention of TMZ and others who expose dirt and intrigue.

Yet, those heros have been used by God to bring about the recovery of what was lost when Adam sinned. God used men and women who mess up like we mess up.

God remains in control and our bad choices cannot and will not thwart his plan. If you are in Christ and have confessed the sin, then it’s over, done.

Move on.

 

Filed Under: Bible Reflection

On concern for the powerful and influential

Posted on December 4, 2015 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

InfluentialIn writing about Lucius Sulla, Augustine says,

“For that victory was not so conducive to his exaltation to power, as it was fatal to his ambition; for by it he became so insatiable in his desires, and was rendered so arrogant and reckless by prosperity, that he may be said rather to have inflicted a moral destruction on himself than corporal destruction on his enemies.”

I’m not a good enough student of history to cite the reasons for Augustine taking such a dim view of Sulla’s career.

The point of challenge for me is Augustine’s perspective that Sulla’s choices had as great an effect on himself as they did on those he mistreated. The point is that we should not only be concerned about the effect on society but should also be concerned about the souls of the ones who are making the decisions.

It is so easy to lose this perspective. I hear things about political leaders and I see decisions that are made and get frustrated and angry at the abuse of power and waste of resources. Yet I don’t stop long enough to be concerned about those who are perpetrating the abuse and waste.

The influential and powerful are no less loved by God than the poor and outcasts. God is concerned for their souls and I should share that concern. But often I get caught up in the rhetoric and lose sight of the fact that the influential and powerful imperil their own souls by their actions.

Perhaps I should spend as much time praying for those who are making choices with which I disagree as I do decrying the abuse.

The point is not to move toward inaction, but to move toward prayer before, during and after action.

Filed Under: Bible Reflection

What Matthew 6 teaches me about worry and ministry

Posted on December 2, 2015 Written by Mark McIntyre 4 Comments

This is the 26th post in the Sermon on the Mount Series.

WorryI have often read the admonition against worry that is found in Matthew 6:25-34. I understand that I should not worry about whether I will eat, what I will wear or where I will live. Jesus tells me that God is big enough to provide for my material needs.

But it dawned on me this morning that these verses reach deeper into my being than a first reading might indicate.

What hit me was that whether the need is material, emotional or spiritual, I should not doubt God’s ability to provide for that need.

OK, so what does this have to do with ministry?

The AHA! comes with the realization that ministry is one of the spheres in which this principle applies. I have sometimes wondered if I am doing enough to fulfill my stewardship in ministry. I have sometimes felt pressured that I should be doing more.

This pressure takes the form of studying harder, attending more events, filling more ministry slots, etc.

None of these are bad things, but if I am doing them without a sense of call or without a sense that God is the one who actually does anything of eternal value, then I am taking on more than I ought.

With all of these things, if I am worrying or wondering if I am doing enough, I am likely to be taking on responsibility that is not mine.

Worry does not become a virtue just because the worry is over ministry responsibilities.

Just sayin’ . . .

Filed Under: Bible Reflection Tagged With: Matthew 6, ministry, worry

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