Posts Tagged With: Christian

Theology and the Violin

My dad, a violin player, of whom one frustrated professor of theology once said, “One stupid man can ask more questions than 100 theologians can answer,” had lots of questions about the Bible and what it said. He loved God but that didn’t stop him asking questions.

Dad playing the violin - strings tensioned.

Dad playing the violin – strings tensioned.

“How can God be sovereign, be in control and still give man freedom to choose? How can God be three yet one? How can Jesus be God and man? Will God condemn people who have never had the chance to hear the gospel?” … and many, many more. Hence the frustrated professor. The Bible has many imponderables – conundrums that we simply have to accept by faith. Our tendency is to choose a side and try to justify it. Wesley and Whitefield were friends but took opposing views on the sovereignty of God and the free agency of man. We have those, like Wesley,  who follow Arminius’ line and make man the master of his own spiritual destiny and you have the hyper-Calvinists who won’t act because God is sovereign and in charge after all so all they need to do is sit on their sanctified behinds. It makes mission a non – priority too.

My (non) answer to these dilemmas is what I have called the “theology of the violin”. If a violin string is not under tension you cannot get a note out of it. I know because my dad played the violin and when he wasn’t watching I would “fiddle” with it. (Pun intended!)

These conundrums are like that. Say, for example, we choose man’s freedom over God’s sovereignty, then our problem is that we have an impotent God waiting for Johnny or Mary to make a “decision” for Him. He won’t act unless we choose first. This doesn’t fit with many examples in Scripture from the hardening of Pharaoh’s heart (another of my dad’s stumbling blocks) to Paul’s conversion on the road to Damascus. On the other hand, if we have a God who is sovereignly in control and gives us no real choice, we become automatons – robots. We have no real life of our own. Yet the Bible calls us, often, to repent and believe.

In Scripture however, these two sides are held in constant tension – like a violin string. We are called to repent and believe and, yes, the Holy Spirit is instrumental in this, and God is sovereign over every hair on our head. We see the same in some of the other examples I mentioned earlier and in many other places in the Bible. Our act of faith, knowing how immense our God is, is to accept that both sides of the string are true. Loosen one end of the violin string or the other and we find our belief or doctrine will not play a tune that glorifies God.

Categories: Bible, christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Reflections, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Will the USA be Remembered as a Truly Great Nation?

Unless the USA does some deep soul searching it will never be remembered in the annals of history as it could have been – a truly great nation. The recent tragedy of 26 Americans not being able to fulfil their destiny saddened us all.

When I look at USA I see so much potential. Unlike other nations and empires it was conceived as a democratic nation – a nation of the people “under God”. The Romans for all their engineering and culture will still be remembered as brutal oppressors and the British as imperialists. But the US has often (not always) had a more altruistic motive. The nation entered both WW1 & 2 reluctantly but to serve humanity. The Marshal plan, the Peace Corps and its overseas aid have been signposts of its heart.

However, it is also the nation of trite TV and film,  gross affluence and even worse the home of pornography – but most disastrously of all, mass shootings.

I enjoyed visiting the US. The people were overwhelmingly friendly and generous. In many ways I felt at home there, but the fetish with firearms is confusing for those of us who come from other democracies. Many of us find the power of the firearm in the US, frankly, obscene. In a civil society one can argue for the regulated use of appropriate firearms but as an outsider I see a national addiction and like any addiction it gets out of control and dangerous.

For me the saddest is the alliance of many Christians with the gun lobby. Knowing Christ, could we, even in our wildest imagination, see him supporting NRA? The Christian is called to be counter cultural by proclaiming in a prophetic fashion, the life and the life style of Christ.

I weep and pray for my American friends. You have gone through so much. No nation should see its young wilfully murdered. I believe the challenge is to rekindle the vision of a nation under God. Forget about guns, the British are long gone. A nation under God would be the most amazing legacy you could leave for generations to come. In fact the legacy would be eternal.

Categories: christian, Christianity, Devotional, Reflections, Uncategorized, USA | Tags: , , | 6 Comments

Blindness of the Heart

I have written previously about my father’s experience as an “conscripted” worker forced to work in Germany during World War 2. In the photo below, my dad (on the left) stands with two friends at a tram stop in Berlin in 1943.

dad germany

At a tramstop: Berlin c1943

From the photo it is difficult to believe there is a horrendous war going on at the time it was taken. Almost four years of war have already been gone through, yet daily life, it seems, is going on as normal. Within the next two years allied troops would storm Berlin and it would become a divided city until the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989. The people of Germany may have had an inkling, but certainly no knowledge of, what was going to happen in the future. As best they could, they were living life as normally as possible.

We may have a variety of responses to this. They must have been blind, or foolish or wilfully ignorant. Or, maybe, they were caught in a trap of their leader’s making and they felt powerless to do anything about it.

So often we live like that too. Men are good at denying symptoms of a disease until it is too late. Parents see behaviour in their children that should alert them to dangers but continue pretending that everything is ok. Or most seriously, we know there is a spiritual dimension to our lives but we fail to respond to it.

The other day I reviewed a book by Francis Spufford “Unapologetic”. What I liked about it was the struggle that he revealed as he dealt with those spiritual questions. He didn’t push that “spiritual nagging” aside but opened his life to its challenging journey.

My dad was a man like that. He was the black sheep of his family and the church. He asked questions that no one could, or wanted to, answer. However, as a child growing up it was plain to me that my dad had an on going conversation/argument/relationship with God. There was never a doubt about God’s existence. My dad just struggled to understand God’s intentions, or at other times submit to His call on my dad’s life.

One of the spiritual legacies my father left to me was the image of a real God who comes into our lives. He also showed me that this was a dynamic, on going and relationship. So, unlike the people in the photo above, there was never any doubt about how “life’s story” would end and who was in control.

Categories: christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Family, History, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , | 5 Comments

Old Testament Advent Poem No. 9

The Key – Jeremiah 31:31-34

“For I will forgive their wickedness
    and will remember their sins no more.”

The door of the law,

is solid, large,

immovable and closed.

We lie lifeless

Xmas '[pems

Last Year’s Poems

in its shadow.

Holy, immovable,

divine expectations

bar entry

into God’s perfect presence.

Then,

in Bethlehem

a Key was born:

the door opener –

the barrier destroyer.

The manger child

came

to throw open wide

and prepare entry

for his adopted

brothers and sisters.

And the father

will forgive their wickedness
and will remember their sins no more.

Categories: Advent, christian, Christianity, Poem, poetry | Tags: , , , , | 1 Comment

Unapologetic – an emotional defense of the faith

spuffordA Review:

Unapologetic:

Why, Despite Everything, Christianity Can Still Make Surprising Emotional Sense

By Francis Spufford

If you like Theme Parks and fast rides you may very well like this manic excursion of Spufford’s heart and mind.

The author takes on the thinking of the New Atheists and others but not by engaging in the “God is dead  debate” from a calm, rational, fact and logic perspective (which, incidentally will never work, as both Christianity and Atheism must come from faith perspectives). He tackles it from the heart wrenching depths of the human experience. He looks at God’s encounter with his life from the point of view of someone who has to go through the mire of life.

Warning: if you are offended by language, particularly a word starting with the sixth letter of the alphabet you may wish to read a book by Max Lucado instead. This word is repeated or implied often. As much as I don’t like it, it is effective because it does describe our propensity to completely foul our lives.

Spufford brings us to the foot of the cross – the God/man who not only lives our lives but takes on himself, our foulness. The image Spufford paints with his words is uncomfortable, yet profound.

The author confronts the image of the church and acknowledges that it has done itself a disservice in history. Yet also reflects on some of it wins. However, the strength of the book lies in the personal journey of the author coming to grips with the personal reality of grace in in his own mucked up life and in a mucked up world.

I have a few quibbles. Spufford glibly glosses over some important issues with a dismissive wave of his hand, such as the creation/evolution debate, same sex marriage  and homosexuality. I would rather he hadn’t mentioned these as they detracted from the main thrust – and quite frankly his approach annoyed me. At another point Spufford speaks flippantly of the Kingdom as a Republic. This muddies the beautiful picture of Christ the King and the Kingdom, and also takes away from the main thrust of his un-apologia.

His writing style is manic. I described it to a friend as “Stream of Consciousness on Steroids”. I found myself rereading paragraphs and pages just to remind myself where he was going with his thought. But that may just be me.

Overall: not a book for everybody, but for those who see life as it is – warts and all, it is a great reminder of a God who steps into this walk with us and for us. It is also a challenge for those who see God as non-existent, absent or remote –Spufford’s God  is none of these.

Categories: Book Review, christian, Christianity, Faith, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

Divine Patterns of Comfort

Or, why is there a time for every season?

Spring

Spring

Have you ever stopped to wonder at the cycle of a year. We not only have the seasons, but there is also the Christian calendar. Our workplace or school will have a definite yearly order to it. In Australia our school year finishes with the calendar year but when I was in the UK the two were unrelated, but rather, the transition occurred after summer – at the end of August. But there was still a pattern. There are cycles in our families which are often determined by important birthdays and anniversaries. And there is of course, the dreaded financial year and tax time!

Our lives have a cycle too. An elderly lady once described the three ages of humanity: Youth, Middle Age and “My, you do look well!”

The writer of Ecclesiastes speaks of it in chapter 3. “There is a time for everything … under heaven.” People of a certain vintage with paisley shirts in their wardrobe will remember The Byrds singing these words in the tumultuous 1960s.

Now to my musing: Why has God ordained creation in this way? Life is linear but also circular. There is a progression but also a repetition. The new arrives daily and yet the familiar encircles us yearly.

A fool camping in Spring - in Sweden

A fool camping in Spring – in Sweden

Is this a means that God uses to comfort us? Are the patterns in a life part of His divine embrace? In the confusion of the big dipper of life, there is the regular pattern of the comfortable that comes year after year. In the midst of new craziness, the leaves still fall in autumn and the shoots still leap forth in Spring. So even though life can sometimes seem a little, or a lot, out of control, there is Divine reassurance that life is still held together. There are threads of regularity that weave the fabric of life together. God is still in control.

Categories: christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Reflections | Tags: , , , | 6 Comments

Old Testament Advent Poems No. 8

Hallelujah – Isaiah 9: 6&7

The next  O.T. Advent poem comes straight from Scripture. As a piece of poetry it is untouchable. As gospel, it is beyond price.

For to us a child is born,
to us a son is given,
and the government will be on his shoulders.
And he will be called
Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.
 Of the greatness of his government and peaceXmas '[pems
there will be no end.
He will reign on David’s throne
and over his kingdom,
establishing and upholding it
with justice and righteousness
from that time on and forever.
The zeal of the Lord Almighty
will accomplish this.

Categories: Advent, christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Poem, poetry, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , | 5 Comments

My Brother’s Sin is Always Worse Than Mine

The nations have fallen into the pit they have dug;
their feet are caught in the net they have hidden. Psalm 9:15

The woman said, “I know that Messiah” (called Christ) “is coming. When he comes, he will explain everything to us.” Then Jesus declared, “I, the one speaking to you—I am he.” John 4: 25& 26

Back in the mid 1980s the verse above from Psalm 9 and others like it were quoted to “prove” that AIDS sufferers deserved what they got. I have to confess that, at the time, the thought crossed my mind too. In our family the AIDS crisis came to a head when doctors didn’t want to give my wife and baby a blood transfusion during the premature birth of one of our daughters, as they couldn’t trust the blood supply.

In the midst of this crisis in the mid 80s I was asked to visit a couple’s son who was in his mid 40s and suffered from AIDS. With my recent blood transfusion experience I wasn’t feeling any grace towards AIDS sufferers. However, we have a providential God. On the morning of my first visit I read John 4 as part of my daily devotions, which relates the story of Jesus and the woman at the well. Jesus treats this outcast with firm grace: not accepting the sin but loving the sinner and offering her life. During my one hour journey this passage, like an indigestible meal, would not leave me alone. The Word was confronting.

When I arrived at “Michael’s” home, he shook my hand, welcomed me in, offered me a a coffee and then told me a tragic story of family and marital breakdown, losing his children and finding companionship in the homosexual community of the town. This was a “feeling”, he confessed, that he had always been drawn to but had never, previously, given in to. This community, incidentally, took care of each other with an amazing love and grace. I witnessed this on many future occasions. At one point, Michael said to me, knowing that he had a death sentence, that even knowing that he was going to die, if he could live his life again he would be drawn back into this lifestyle – that draw was so strong.

What I encountered was a struggle with sin. But we all struggle with sin. The only difference is that we minimise our own and maximise others – especially sexual sins. For example if our weakness is greed, we prefer to judge people on their sexual behaviour. If our weakness is gossip then the sexual promiscuity of the other is far worse.

Psalm 9 reminds us that all sin is deadly – eternally. It is only with a relationship with God that an adulterous murderer like David could be confident in his salvation. In himself David could not find redemption . He could only rely on the promises of God – the promise of a Messiah – a Saviour. That same Saviour is our only hope – no matter what our sinful condition might be.

On leaving Michael that first time, I asked him why he had been so open with me; never having met me before. He answered, “You shook my hand, came in and drank my coffee.” In the paranoia of the mid 80s that had been his test to see if he could trust me. I had never thought of that. But God had.

P.S. Michael died a few years later having returned to a relationship with Christ.

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Raised With Christ

Raised with Christ

Categories: christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Photo | Tags: , , , , | 2 Comments

Narrating the World to Your Child

These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts.  Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Deut 6:6&7

This morning I was listening to a radio program about teaching young children to read. Two experts in the area were reflecting on the important factors that encourage literacy. In amongst the usual ideas (read to your children, have books lying around the house, find good apps etc.) one idea resonated in particular. That is: Parents with young children should narrate the world to them. “Mummy is going into the kitchen to get the red bowl.” “Daddy is putting on a woolly jumper.” The idea is that you introduce the child to both words and conversation at an early age while going about your daily duties. Many parents do that quite naturally. Objects and names are connected and actions identified. There were also another host of positives.

100_9680 cropBut do we narrate the the world to our children at a spiritual level? Are we developing their spiritual literacy? In our words and actions, are we reinforcing Christian values and Biblical concepts? Our actions have moral and value laden implications – our children need to know the underpinning that informs what we do. Our children need to learn right behaviour but what is even more important is the right thinking that shapes our behaviour.

Moses, in Deuteronomy 6, understood this. In an age when values are thin on the ground the child of Christian parents needs to be continually shaped by Biblical standards. “We are helping at the the shelter on Christmas Day because Jesus wants us to look after the less fortunate.” “You don’t talk to your mother like that because God wants us to honour our parents.” That second example needs to be demonstrated when you visit your parents or when you talk about them at home.

If we consciously narrate the world spiritually, whether watching TV with issues that arise, debriefing a day at school or simply having dinner, we and our children will be blessed as both parent and child are reminded of the “reason why” we behave and live in a particular way.

Categories: Child Theology, christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Reflections | Tags: , , , , | Leave a comment

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