Friday, September 16, 2016

Reflections from Romans 4

Ways Justification Changes Us
Adapted from Tim Keller’s Romans 1-7 for You.

  1. No Boasting: (v. 2-3, 20) Our righteousness is credited and received, gives us the chance to practice humility

  1. No Cowering: (v. 6-8) We know we are sinful, and we know our sins are covered. Sins are not counted against us and righteousness is credited, which should produce joy and gratitude.

  1. A Great Identity: (v. 12-17) We are included in the great plan of human history through the faith of Abraham.

  1. Complete Assurance: (v. 16) The promise of inheriting the earth and receiving new life is all grace. It relies on God’s work and ability and not mine. This enables us to live without fear of the future.

  1. Hope when hope is gone: (v. 18) There was no hope for Abraham and Sarah except God’s promises. There is hope for us through Jesus Christ alone.


Spend some time this week reflecting on the way that justification changes us. Which is most precious to you today and why? Which most challenges the way you see yourself and your life and why?

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Romans: Grace for Restless Hearts


If you know a college student or young adult  or you are a college student or young adult in Statesboro, GA join us August 21st as we kickoff our fall study of Romans! 

Monday, August 8, 2016

Here We Go!

So over the past several years I have restarted and stopped writing on here more times than I can remember. I set a new goal of using this blog as a ministry to people. The first intended audience is to reach college students in Statesboro, GA, where I serve as a College Minister/Pastor. We launch a new series this fall entitled Romans: Grace for Restless Hearts! Part of the teaching plan is to connect with students during the week with preview thoughts and questions as well as follow up thoughts from our study each week. Writing on this blog started because it was a therapeutic way for me to process life, ministry, and the world around me...hopefully that will continue to be the case. So if you read this and we see each other every week, month, year, or five...ask me if I have posted anything lately so it will be motivation to share my thoughts, musings, ramblings, maybe an adventure or two along this pilgrim journey of faith.

Monday, February 22, 2016

A Lenten Book Review

As part of my personal observation of Lent, in preparation for Easter, I decided to read some selected books that focus specifically on issues associated with Lent. The books range on topics of sin, mourning, grace, frailty, and of course Jesus. I must admit that I haven't been able to read as quickly as I hoped to, but Lent isn't over, so I still have some time. My first selection, Turn My Mourning Into Dancing by Henri Nouwen, is a book I recently picked up at a discounted bookstore. I love finding cheap books! There is something about claiming a great book at a great price that lifts your spirit.

This book is really a collection of Nouwen's thoughts on grief and mourning that was compiled after his death. The book offers a reminder to the reader that even as we walk through mourning for ourselves, a loved one, a career, a relationship, or a phase of life, God's grace is present with us. God's grace is manifested in our moments of hurt, anguish, sorrow, and loss in ways that are never reproduced during the "good" times of life.

Nouwen says in the Introduction, "Suffering becomes a way into deeper fulfillment." Further into the book Nouwen offers these two thoughts that guide the rest of the book. "While Jesus brought great comfort and came with kind words and a healing touch, he did not come to take all our pains away. The way from Palm Sunday to Easter is the patient way, the suffering way."

The Psalmist writes, "You have turned my mourning into joyful dancing" (Psalm 30:11). Over the course of the last six years I have wrestled with losing people who are close and dear to me. Fathers, friends, relatives, each of them impacting my life in different ways. As I worked through my grief and loss especially with my fathers (my father and my wife's father) I realized that few people know how to grieve well with someone else. Most people, though well intentioned, offer some condolence and kind word, that stays with us long enough for spit to dry. I found even as a minister, not knowing how to console people until I experienced these loses and tried to make some sense of them in my own life. As I worked through my mourning, I found that joyful dancing did return, even if only in spurts at first. I also realized that what I most needed, and my hunch is that most people who mourn feel this way, was for someone to crawl inside the hole of sorrow with me and sit. I wanted, I needed the presence of friends who didn't try to fix my sadness, which was overwhelming. I needed someone to crawl in my hole and perhaps by their very presence remind me that God is present even in my mourning. "To live with compassion means to enter others' dark moments. It is to walk into places of pain, not to flinch or look away when another agonizes. It means to stay where people suffer." I found Nouwen's words to be true, "at the center of our grief we find the grace of God."

At the center of my experience with grief I found God's grace in deeper, richer tones than I ever had before. Nouwen's book is a excellent reminder of the overwhelming nature of sorrow and grief, which finds new meaning and purpose in light of the gospel.


Tuesday, February 2, 2016

College Spring Break Mission Trip


Can't wait for the opportunity to see college students from Georgia Southern serving the people of Brunswick in a month and a half!!


Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Reflections on Discipleship

I am preparing to teach a course on Evangelism and Discipleship at Guido Bible Institute in Metter, so I have been trying to absorb some "new to me" books on those two topics to help enrich the class lectures. I came across a book by N.T. Wright entitled Following Jesus: Biblical Reflections on Discipleship and soaked it up in about a week. It is essentially a collection of sermons/lectures he has given around this theme. As with anything I have read by Wright I was challenged to expand my understanding of what it means to follow Jesus. I was also encouraged by what God is doing in and through me, as I am shaped on the anvil of Christ. Below are two comments that have really stuck with me.

Let's make no mistake about it; until you learn to live without fear you won't find it easy to follow Jesus. p. 67

The answer to temptation is to find out, perhaps painfully and over a long period, what it is about you that is at the moment out of shape, distorted, in pain. Then one may begin to find out, again often painfully, how it is that God longs to help you to get what is distorted back into focus; to get what is crooked back into shape; to get what is bruised and hurt back into health. p. 88 

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Letters From A Skeptic

I finished reading Letters From A Skeptic recently and I was reminded of the power of honest questions and answers in helping a person discover Jesus. The book is a composite of letters between a father and son (Ed Boyd and Greg Boyd) as the father slowly makes a journey toward faith and belief in Jesus. His questions about Christianity are honest and straightforward for his son, who is a minister and theologian. Greg Boyd offers his dad, well thought-out answers, not patent Sunday school answers in an effort to be authentic. In the letters the reader sees the growth of the relationship between father and son in addition to the necessary spiritual growth of the senior Boyd.

This is a great resource for someone who is wrestling with questions about Christianity, the Bible, and Jesus. Because the letter format is preserved, the material comes across as genuine rather than academic, ethereal discussions about key doctrines and finer points of theology.

If you have a family member or friend who is struggling with certain aspects of Christianity this book is a great resource to give them. Read it with them and discuss the topics that the Boyd's cover.