Tuesday, January 31, 2017

IN ALL THE SCRIPTURES

Do you know what meditation is? Most of you have meditated on scripture from time to time. But have you ever meditated on the person of Christ. We sing, “Turn your eyes upon Jesus.” I recommend doing just that as a spiritual discipline. You might remember a favorite event recorded in the Gospels and spend time thinking about Jesus in that situation. You might also meditate on some things Jesus said or did that are hard to understand or disturbing.

But let me introduce you to a different kind of meditating on Jesus. Come with me to a seminal event in the life of Jesus. In Luke 24 we read that after His resurrection Jesus appeared to two disciples on the road to Emmaus. Jesus opened the Scriptures to them. And later they said  their hearts burned within them as He taught. In the Bible the word “heart” refers to the center of your being. Their lives were set ablaze as Jesus taught. But notice how He taught them. Verse 27 says,
“Then beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, He interpreted for them the things concerning Himself in all the scriptures.”
Let those words soak in a minute. “In all the scriptures.”
Now go with me to John 5:39. Jesus said,
“You pour over the scriptures because you think you have eternal life in them, yet they testify about me.”
Do you see what I'm getting at in these two scriptures. The Bible teaches that every Scripture points to Jesus. So can you meditate on Jesus in scripture, in the New and Old Testaments. All meditating on scripture should be meditating on Jesus.
Let me give you an easy one.  John the Baptist said Jesus is the “Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.” So, what light does that shine on the Old Testament sacrifices? Here's another. When the people were about to die of thirst in the wilderness Moses struck the rock and water came out. 1st Corinthians 10:4 says that rock was Christ. Jesus is The Rock that was struck so we would not die in the wilderness.
I need this say that this is not always so easy. You need the Holy Spirit to enlighten His word as you meditate. But it is important to know that scripture is not about you. It is about Jesus. What about the story of David and Goliath? Well, if you read that as if it were about you, you would try very hard to be courageous. And you would fail most of the time because you would be trusting yourself rather than God. Instead, can you see Jesus as your hero giving you courage? When you meditate long enough on any Scripture the Holy Spirit Will begin to show you Jesus. Your heart will begin to burn in you as well. And your life will be changed.


http://watchinginprayer.blogspot.com/

http://writingprayerfully.blogspot.com/

http://daveswatch.com/index.html/

Monday, January 16, 2017

AM I POSTMODERN?

I am postmodern in a way. But I suppose I need to begin this blog by addressing those of you who immediately think of the philosophical category of postmodernism from that point of view I'm certainly not a postmodernist. A genuine postmodernist might think of me as a reactionary traditionalist. I certainly believe in absolute truth, and that separates me from that philosophical category. However, there is a sense in which I do tend in that direction. Stated simply, I have some distrust for the thinking that what is new is always best. Some years ago I told the London taxi driver things looked more modern than when I was there in the 1970s. He took it as a huge compliment. I did not necessarily mean it so.
In fact, I am uncomfortable with those who always love the next new thing. I have receive some writing advice from a successful writer who tends to call certain techniques out of date. I want to know if they are poor communication, or if they will offend readers. But he does not seem to be able to think in those terms.
I once wrote our denomination’s publishing house about something that bothered me in a student Sunday School lesson. I quoted The Keil and Delitzsch Commentary that said the position presented in the Sunday School book was held only by those who did not believe the Bible. The author wrote me back quite graciously saying I had forced him to go to the library. But his answer was that he found commentaries written before 1900 tended to agree with me and newer commentaries agreed with him. He did not think he needed to give their reasons or what they knew that the older commentators did not. He simply thought the new trumped the old.
Some of you may immediately think of technology. You like your newer car and your new phone. But I suspect most of you do not like them better because they are new. You like your car because it is not worn out like a 1954 Cadillac. And you like your phone because it will do so more things than even last year’s model. You like new technology because it is better, not because it is new.
But what about morals or values? Are they better because they are newer? New values may be better, because we have learned more. They may be better because we have seen results of older thinking. But as often as not, our thinking has changed because we have forgotten what another generation understood.
I have the same attitude toward holding to traditional thinking. Whether an idea is old or new has no bearing upon whether it is true or false.

I fear my own position leans toward pragmatism. I want what will accomplish what is needed. But I know what I want to accomplish may be short sighted. In the long run what is right will be best. What is true will be continually contemporary. We need to draw our values from God Himself. He is the same in every generation. We must seek what is Biblical, righteous, helpful, and good.