Tag Archives: Sin

The Beauty of Story

There is perhaps no more powerful expression in human experience than the Story. It grabs our imagination and entices our intellect. A good story does to language what music accomplishes in a somewhat different way: it allows us to feel the ideas that words express as well as consider them rationally. The Story, the Ballad, the Parable allows us to think and to feel and to relate and to consider. Great stories posit great Truths, but they also allow us to express and imagine those great concepts. They captivate our creativity, using both the mind and the heart, the analytical and the sensual and the emotional.

In the biblical narrative of Christ’s birth, life, death and resurrection we can know some things. Christ was born to a human mother. Jesus grew and learned. He preached and ministered. Jesus never sinned and He died and He rose again. These things can be known analytically from the Biblical accounts. Yet, in Narrative, I can feel the joy and excitement of Jesus’ birth. I can sympathize with my High Priest who first sympathizes with me. I can feel horror and disgust at His scourgings. I can mourn with His disciples at His death.  I can weep at what my sin did to my Sin-Bearer and Savior. I can experience pure exultation and surprise at His resurrection and I can glory in His exaltation. Through narrative I can indeed know the objective truths of Scripture, yet I can also feel and more fully understand those Truths, in Christ.

Quote of the Week – The Point is Jesus

American evangelicalism has not done a great job at making Jesus the point of the enterprise of faith. We take the Gospel notion of “faith alone,” a belief many Reformers died contending for, and make it about us. We turn perseverance into personal empowerment and sanctification into self-improvement. We’ve made religion a bad word by turning Law into legalism and grace into license. We made Jesus our buddy, our co-pilot, our sidekick. We don’t have sin — we have “issues.” We say we have bad habits rather than admit we have sinful hearts. We look to Scripture in general as a toolbox of pick-me-up quotable quotes and to the Gospels specifically as a chronicle of warm-fuzzy behavioral aspirations. We forgo Christian repentance and gospel proclamation in favor of the culture war against gay marriage, evolution, atheism, liberalism, America forgetting her heritage, what-have-you.

- Jared Wilson (http://gospeldrivenchurch.blogspot.com/2009/05/point-is-jesus.html)

Oh Lord, My Sin O’ertakes Me

(set to the tune of “O Sacred Head Now Wounded”)

Oh Lord my sin o’ertakes me
And claims me as its own
It blinds my eyes with malice
So I can’t see Your Throne
It wraps its foulest tendrils
Around my bony frame
It warps my inhibitions
So I’ll forget Your Name


I hate it when I’m sinful
I long to do Your Will
Lord, give me Grace to conquer
The sin within me still
I long, Lord, to be holy
Lord shower me with grace
Lord sanctify Your servant
To stand before Your Face


Lord bring me soon to Glory
Where I’ll be free from sin
I long to dwell in Heaven
Lord bring me to the end
I long to see Your Glory
With pure and seeing eyes
I long to worship fully
Where worship never dies

Richard Baxter on Unpardoned Sin

Richard Baxter

“Unpardoned sin will never let us rest or prosper, though we be at ever so much care and cost to cover it: our sin will surely find us out, though we find not it out.”

-Richard Baxter

“Growing a Local Church”, Church Discipline and Church Growth (Dr. Tom Ascol)

The final session has completed.  This last session was on Church Discipline and Church Growth, by Dr. Tom Ascol.

Tom spoke on the two forms of Church Discipline, Formative and Corrective, as well as the two forms of Church Growth, Numerical and Spiritual

Formative Church Discipline is something that should happen all the time within the church.  It is that educational, instructional learning that every member of a Church should be experiencing.  Corrective Church Discipline, then, is necessary when when formative discipline is not happening in a member, and when that member remains unrepentent of his/her sin.

He made a very good point about corrective discpline in that it is NOT in response to sin, but rather in response to a lack of and unwillingness to repent of that sin.  It should be done in love and with reverence, never out of hatred or spite.

In talking about Church Growth, Tom made the point that in the current evangelical culture we exist in, where the Church Growth Movement has run totally amock, we sometimes are too reactionary and that we SHOULD seek for numerical growth, but Biblical Numerical Growth.

In addition, Tom spoke of the Spiritual Growth that should be happening in a church, wherebye her members are made more like her Savior.

Finally, Tom made a Biblical and Historical connection between Church Discipline and Church Growth.  If Church Discipline is not happening, then Biblical Church Growth is not happening.  Likewise, if a Church is practicing Biblical Church Discipline, then some form of Biblical Church Growth should be expected.

Overall, very good session and good conclusion to the conference.  I’ll try to put together a summary of my thoughts of the conference maybe later today or tomorrow.  Until then, enjoy the quotes and pictures.

I think I screwed up the video for this session, so you’ll have to content yourself with the mp3 when it is made available.  Rath Dé ort!

Church Discipline is absolutely necessary for Church Health.

Church Discipline is the process of maintaining and training the principles and practices of Jesus Christ in the Church.

Church growth is that which happens in the life of the congregation when the Lord manifests his blessings.

The Faithful practice of Church Discipline…has often been followed with wonderful seasons of Church Growth.

Our modern forgetfulness of Church Discipline practically screams out a ‘Practical Atheism’

When a Church takes the name of Jesus Christ and yet refuses to obey the simple, clear teachings of Christ that church is at best clouding over the glory of God in Christ.

We should never expect Revival to come without Reformation.

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Soli Deo Gloria!

The Types of People God Uses and Chooses

I’ve been reading through the stories of Abraham and Jacob and Joseph and Israel in Egypt and their journey in the wilderness, and will yet get to David and Solomon and one thing that strikes me in reading all of this is the type of people God uses and chooses.

For example, Abraham was a pagan, yet God chose him to be the father of many nations.  Even after entering into covenant with God and being promised that the number of his descendants would be as vast as the stars above, Abraham still acted the cowardly liar.  Jacob was a sniveling, wimpy Momma’s Boy.  Jacob’s sons themselves had all SORTS of issues.  Rahab was a prostitute, David not only committed adultery, out of envy he had the woman’s husband killed, but wasn’t even “man” enough to kill the fellow with his own hands, he had him sent to the front lines of a war that he wasn’t even fighting in.  Solomon, with his multitude of wives, had his issues as well.  Then, you look at the churches that Paul writes to and the churches that the Spirit writes to in Revelations, through John’s hand and its astounding to see just how Gracious the Lord really is.  It’s not that He saves sinners who engage in some sunday-school notion of sinfullness.  He saves liars and whores and murderers and thieves and cowards and adulterers.

In other words, he saves men and women like you and me.