Monday, March 23, 2015

Redeemer Ministry School Classes - Spring 2015

MOVES OF GOD 
Teachers –  JEREMIAH WERSTEIN & AL WILLINGHAM
Class Description: This class will focus on past moves of God, the leadership, situations, theology and how we apply these things to our lives today. The present day church stands on the shoulders of these historical movements and reveal to us what is possible when even one person is intimately yielded to following Jesus. We will cover movements from the late 1800's to the present.
 Class begins Saturday, March 28th, and will run from 10 AM to noon. 
RELATIONSHIPS
-         John & Linda Piippo
-         Begins Sun night, March 29, 6 PM
 SERVANT LEADERSHIP
-         Jim & Denise Hunter
-         Begins Sun morning, April 12, 9-10:15 AM before worship service.

To enroll: send me an email (johnpiippo@msn.com) or call our office (734-242-5277).

Discipleship & the Holy Spirit Conference in Milton, PA - April 16-18


REGISTER TODAY
 

Discipleship & The Holy Spirit

Spring Pastor and Laity Conference

 

April 16-18 (Thursday-Saturday)

Host Church: First Baptist Church ~ Milton, PA

 
 
ABCOPAD Pastors and Lay Ministers Registration Fee $49*
for the whole conference (includes meals)
 
ABCOPAD Laity (Church members) Registration Fee $10*
for Saturday only (includes lunch)
 
 *Overnight housing / hotel is on your own
 

Keynote Speakers

 
Rev. Dr. Clay Ford
Holy Spirit Renewal Ministries
 
 
 
Rev. Dr. John Piippo
Spiritual Formation Specialist

Full Conference Schedule 


Conference Registration 


Conference Schedule

Thursday

11:00 a.m. - Registration Opens
 
1:00pm – Welcome and worship
 
1:30pm – Dr. Clay Ford - The Role of the Holy Spirit in the Formation of Disciples
 
2:30pm – Dr. John Piippo: Leading the Presence Driven Church
 
3:30pm - 4:30pm - Guided Small Group Exercises
 
7:00pm to 8:30pm Worship: Dr. Clay Ford
Challenges of Pastoral Ministry: Why We Need to Be Filled with the Holy Spirit
 

Friday

9:00am Worship
 
9:30am – noon: Dr. Clay Ford - Essential Leadership Keys for Taking Your Church to the Next Level
 
Lunch
 
1:00pm – 4:00pm: Dr. John Piippo - How God Transforms the Human Heart
 
Free Time
 
7:00pm to 8:30pm Worship: Dr. John Piippo - Servant Leadership Emerges from the Presence Driven Church

Saturday

(Webinar Opportunities Marked)
9:00am Worship
 
9:30am - 10:45am: Dr. John Piippo - Hearing the Voice of God: The Distinction between Discernment and Decision-Making (WEBINAR)
 
10:45am break
 
11:00am – 12:15: Dr. Clay Ford - God’s Call to Personal Spiritual Awakening (WEBINAR)
 
12:30 lunch
 
1:00pm – 2:00pm Workshops
      Clay: The Holy Spirit's Central Role in Making Disciples (WEBINAR)
      John: Prayer and Healing
 
2:00pm Break
 
2:15pm – 3:15pm Workshops
 
      Clay: How To Invite The Presence of God
      John: Prayer and Healing (WEBINAR)
 
3:20pm – 4:00pm Q&A with Clay and John and others

I Woke Up Today Praying (PrayerLife)

Warren Dunes State Park, Michigan
It is now common for me to wake up praying and retire to bed at night praying. How did this happen to me? It is, I feel certain, the end result of a life of disciplined praying.

This life began in 1977 when I forced myself to get away to a lonely place and pray, a half hour a day. I chose to pray, which means I acted on it. I prayed.

The choice to pray and stay with it has morphed into DNA-praying. The choice to pray has become praying. If there is a choice now it would be to choose not to pray. This would be hard to do, since I am someone who cannot not-pray. I am a praying person, which means I am a person who would find it hard to not pray.

Henri Nouwen writes: "Discipline means that something very specific and concrete needs to be done to create the context in which a life of uninterrupted prayer can develop." (Nouwen, The Only Necessary Thing: Living a Prayerful Life, 91)

A long time ago I chose to pray for a half hour a day. I chose to do my praying in the piano room of our house in East Lansing. I chose to accompany my praying times with Scripture meditation. I chose to keep a spiritual journal and write down what God was saying to me and doing in me. I began to experience God meeting with me, speaking to me, strengthening me, guiding me, healing me. A life of uninterrupted praying began to develop. And I woke up today praying.

Saturday, March 21, 2015

N.T. Wright on the "Dying and Rising God" Myth

I was dialoguing with an atheist after he wrote: “I do not believe Jesus was a real person. I believe the Jesus of the Bible is a mish-mash of previous “Sons of God” or “Sun Gods” such as Osiris, Mithras or Dionysus, all were born of virgins, all were martyred. All were resurrected. It’s just a re-telling of the old tales into a new tale.” I've heard this before. What can I make of it?

It’s false. Here’s why. But first note: If you want to read much more see N.T. Wright’s The Resurrection of the Son of God, Ch. 2, “Shadows, Souls, and Where They Go: Life Beyond Death in Ancient Paganism.” Wright combines excellent scholarship with clear writing to show that the idea that, e.g., Osiris, Mithras, and Dionysus et. al. “were [mythically] resurrected” is false because a misunderstanding of the meaning of ‘resurrection.’ In the ancient world in which Judeo-Christianity was situated “’resurrection’ was not an option.” (Wright, 60)

“Resurrection,” in the Judeo-Christian sense, means: “a new embodied life which would follow whatever ‘life after death’ might be.” (Wright, 83) The Greco-Roman world assumed that such a thing was impossible.

The Isis, Osiris, and Dionysus myths are affiliated with fertility rites and “productivity of the soil.” (Ib., 80)

These gods “died and rose” every year. “The new life they might thereby experience was not a return to the life of the present world.” Nobody actually expected the mummies to get up, walk about and resume normal living: nobody in that world would have wanted such a thing, either.” (Ib., 80-81)

“When the Christians spoke of the resurrection of Jesus they did not suppose it was something that happened every year, with the sowing of seed and the harvesting of crops. They could use the image of sowing and harvesting to talk about it; they could celebrate Jesus’ death by breaking bread; but to confuse this with the world of the dying and rising gods would be a serious mistake… When Paul preached in Athens, nobody said, ‘Ah, yes, a new version of Osiris and such like. The Homeric assumption remained in force. Whatever the gods – or the crops – might do, humans did not rise again from the dead.” (Ib., 81)

The two greatest influences on the Greco-Roman worldview were Plato and Homer. For Plato ‘resurrection’ was a detestable thought; for Homer it was an impossible thing.

The Christian idea of resurrection is antithetical to Platonic thinking because the human body, for Plato, is a “prison” and no one would want to inhabit it again after death.

For Homer the dead are “shades,” “ghosts,” “phantoms.” “They are in no way fully human beings, though they may look like them; the appearance is deceptive, since one cannot grasp them physically.” (Ib., 43)

The Egyptian Osiris myth has no concept of “resurrection” in it as Christians understood it. Egyptian mummification assumes the person is “still ‘alive’ in some bodily sense, despite appearances.” “’Resurrection’ is an inappropriate word for Egyptian belief.” (Ib., 47).

There are a lot of reasoning and resources in Wright’s chapter. He concludes with three things.

1. “When the early Christians spoke of Jesus being raised from the dead, the natural meaning of that statement, throughout the ancient world, was the claim that something had happened to Jesus which had happened to nobody else. A great many things supposedly happened to the dead, but resurrection did not.” (Ib., 83)

2. “The early Christian belief that Jesus was in some sense divine cannot have been the cause of the belief in his resurrection…. Divinization did not require resurrection; it regularly happened without it. It involved the soul, not the body.” (Ib.)

3. The ancient non-Judeo-Christian world took the Judeo-Christian term ‘resurrection,’ which referred to something hardly anyone believed in, “and used it to denote something a great many people believed in”; viz., non-bodily life after death.

Wright writes: This “was a variation that attempted to retain Christian language about Jesus, and about the future destiny of Christians, whole filling it with non-Christian, and for that matter non-Jewish, content. If this mutation had been the norm, and belief in bodily resurrection the odd variant, why would anyone have invented the latter? And why would not Celsus have pointed this all out?” (Ib., 84) Good question.

Friday, March 20, 2015

Jesus Is the Way (I Still Believe that...)

Bolles Harbor, Lake Erie, Monroe, MI
Jesus is the Way. That was his claim. I came to believe it at age 21. I still believe it. Jesus is the Way to God. Jesus is the Redeemer and Reconciler and Rescuer of all humanity. All who come to God through him will be saved.

Jesus is not just another cool alternative in life. Jesus is the Answer to life.

If Jesus is just another religious alternative in life's buffet of spiritualities, then I'm not interested. If that was all Jesus was I would check out of the faith. Why choose "take up your cross and deny yourself" Christianity among religious alternatives when I could pick among Moralistic Therapeutic Deism or Oprahism or Religion Lite (like "Eckhart Tolle" - btw not his real name - beware of people who change their name to be awesome), or even Atheism (since as far as I can tell atheism demands nothing).

I am not spiritually interested in "It works for me." I need to know. I need "It is true." If it is not true (which would then mean, logically, it is not true for everyone, because that is just the nature of truth), then I'm not with Jesus no matter how it works. I will not invest my life in a falsehood. 

Jesus said, "I am the way, the truth, and the life.No one comes to the Father except by me." (John 14:6) Jesus said that, not me. His claim interests me. It is a bold and radical. It is a marginalizing claim. Do not freak out by this fact, since all truth marginalizes. Period. "Truth" is not egalitarian. Truth divides. Necessarily. I could never accept the inherent irrationality of the subjectivist fallacy, which says there is "my truth" and "your truth." For God's sake take a logic class and get over this nonsense! If it is not true that Jesus is the way then it is not true for everyone. And if it is true that Jesus is the way then it is true for everyone.

Forty-five years ago I came to believe that Jesus is the way and that, ipso facto, it is necessarily true for everyone. (This coming Wed. [March 25, 9:30 AM at Redeemer] I will teach on "Is Jesus the Only Way to God?")

Real Church Is a Community, Not a Crowd

Lake Erie
Eugene Peterson's The Pastor will kill the false self as quickly as anything I've read. That's good for me, since the true self sleeps better with the mask off.

Peterson describes a pastoral colleague who changed churches for the wrong reasons. He wanted to pastor a "big" church rather than the small church he had. The big church, he thought, would "multiply his effectiveness." Peterson wrote him a letter. I will paraphrase it.

You want to pastor a big church to satisfy your own ego, not to "pastor" people. "Big" churches are the kind of things America specializes in. The consequence of such mega-specialization is that American Christianity and its pastors are a mess.

Jesus was tempted by "bigness" and rejected it. Because size is the great depersonalizer. As Kierkegaard said, "the more people, the less truth."

Jesus-followers are only brought to maturity through intimacy, renunciation, and personal deepening. Pastors are there to nurture such maturity. Yes, things can happen in big churches, but only by strenuously going against the grain. Largeness is an impediment, not a help.

Americans try to find meaning in three ways: 1) through the highs of alcohol and drugs; 2) through the ecstasy of recreational sex; and 3) through the ecstasy of crowds. Pastors often speak against drugs and sex, but want crowds like people want drugs and sex. This is probably because they get so much ego benefit from the crowds. "But a crowd destroys the spirit as thoroughly as excessive drink and depersonalized sex. It takes us out of ourselves, but not to God, only away from him."

We want, as pastors, a big church to escape self-boredom and core-unfulfillment (even though Christ is in us). "A crowd is an exercise in false transcendence upward, which is why all crowds are spiritually pretty much the same, whether at football games, political rallies, or church."

"Crowds" are probably a worse danger for pastors than drink, drugs, or sex. What's needed, what "church" is really meant to be, is a "community," not a "crowd."

Big churches actually diminish a pastor's influence.

When the "church growth" movement hit seminaries Peterson and a few of his colleagues named it the "church cancer" movement having mostly to do with the American "lust for size."

(Linda and I are in our 24th year at Redeemer and getting know our people better.)

Thursday, March 19, 2015

A Praying Life Opens a Window (PrayerLife)

The River Raisin in Monroe County
Thomas Merton discovered that a praying life rendered him less tense, less agitated, less needy, less restless, and more at peace. And, Merton's praying life opened his eyes to nature. I experience this all the time. In praying I get transformed, which then transforms how I experience and what I see.

Henri Nouwen describes Merton's inner transformation.

"Prayer makes people contemplative and attentive.  In place on manipulating, people who pray stand receptive before the world. They no longer grab but caress, they no longer bite but kiss, they no longer examine but admire. To prayerful people, nature can show itself completely renewed. Instead of an obstacle, it becomes a way; instead of an invulnerable shield, it becomes a veil that gives a preview of unknown horizons." (Henri Nouwen, Encounters with Merton, 46)

As much as I am able I spend my praying time in some piece of God's creation. The creation provides a window into the being of God and the meaning of my life; my praying life opens the window.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

In Prayer God Will Address Our Failure (PrayerLife)


Recently I heard from a friend who was praying and God confronted them with some unrighteous behavior they were engaging in. This broke their heart.

As I heard this I thought, "This is good. Thank you, God, for doing this for my friend!"

This reminded me of an old television commericial for "Mennen Skin Bracer" after shave. It showed a man in a bathroom, looking into the mirror. He'd just finished shaving, took a bottle of Skin Bracer, poured some on both palms, and rubbed it onto his face. As soon as he did this a hand came out of the mirror and slapped his freshly anointed cheeks. The man said, "Thanks, I needed that!" That's how bracing and refreshing Skin Bracer was supposed to be. It gave the man a wake-up call.

Many times, while praying, I have had a divine "Thanks, I needed that!" experience. God points out something inside me that is spiritually diseased. When this happens I write it down in my journal in words like... "God, You have just searched out my heart and shown me something that needs to be removed." This could be pride, a bad attitude, hatred, lust, envy, covetousness, jealousy, a controlling spirit, lack of compassion, or resistance to God. A revelation of my inner garbage has often been accompanied by a sense of brokenness and grief.

In 45 years of following after Jesus God has uncovered all of these things and more, within me. This is good. When this happens (and it will if you continue to meet one-on-one with Him) it is another "Thank You God" moment. God rescues me again from myself.

Over the years I've met many who fear meeting with God because of this. They are like the person who fears going to the doctor because an illness might be discovered. We need to remember that living under the illusion of health (called "denial") is to be on a road to spiritual disaster.

While we may not like being told "You are sick," we should be glad for the exposing of sickness when it is there. The revelation of inner sin-disease is the beginning of its removal, by God. God never shows us our failure only to leave us in that miserable place. That would be like a doctor who diagnoses but does not cure.

When God shows me something inside that is not of Him it is not accompanied by condemnation. People do that; God does not. There is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:1). God comes to rescue us, to save us from ourselves. We may not have even thought we needed a rescue. Then, as we meet with Him for another praying hour, God-as-Great-Physician identifies a spiritual cancer, operates, and bathes us with radiating, healing love. This breaks our hearts. We see that it is very good. We cry out, "Thank You God, for doing this for me!"

Philosophy of Religion Exams

The second round of oral exams for my Philosophy of Religion class (MCCC) will be Mon., March 23, and Wed., March 25.

They will be held in room A153, main campus.

THE QUESTIONS


  1. Mackie's logical argument from evil against the existence of God.
  2. Buddhism's idea of evil as an illusion.
  3. Plantinga's refutation of Mackie.
  4. Rowe's evidential argument from evil against the existence of God.
  5. Wykstra's criticism of Rowe.

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Study Servant Leadership This Spring in Redeemer Ministry School




Course:  Servant Leadership

Led By:  Denise & Jim Hunter    www.jameshunter.com

Dates:  6 Consecutive Sunday Mornings (April 12, 19, 26/May 3, 10, 17)

Time:  9:00-10:15am

Course Description:  Denise & Jim will lead the group through the principles of servant leadership including:

Ø Defining Leadership
Ø Leading with authority versus power
Ø Meeting needs versus wants
Ø Community Building & Leadership
Ø Leadership & Abiding in Christ
Ø Practical Applications
Ø Texts utilized: “The Bible” by God & “The Servant” by Jim Hunter

To enroll, please register in the church lobby, or call the office (734-242-5277)