Read ALL the Books in the Bible!

Jan 11, 2012 by

Today, Desiring Virtue contributor Becky, encourages us to not overlook those “difficult” books found in the Bible, but instead to dig deep into them and allow these portions of the Word of God to sanctify you!

Have you chosen a Bible plan to follow this year? I am very, very happy with my reading plan because it allows me to have all the flexibility I love, and at the same time it helps me not to leave out books like Amos or Numbers. Sisters, no matter which Bible Reading plan you follow, make sure you read all the Bible this year, not only the Psalms.

I have learned that the easiest way to read all the books that seem to be hard to understand is to study them in depth instead of just jumping from one verse to the other trying to catch some vague significance.

So my little advice today is this: read those “hard” books from the first chapter to the last with a good study help at hand. You don’t have to spend a lot of money if you don’t want to, however, building a good library with good Bible commentaries will be very profitable if you decide to do so. For example, let us take  a look at the book of Amos; there are many great helps that are available online and are free:

If you would rather buy a commentary you can choose from several good options:

If you would like to listen to a whole series on this book while doing the dishes and folding laundry, why not investing in this, Biblical Studies: Amos, which is a compilation of sermons preached by Douglas Wilson (verse by verse chapter by chapter).

Well, hopefully you get the idea, whenever you come to hard books or passages in the Bible, dig deeper, and you will be sure to find unexpected treasures.

Let us not forget that:

All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work.”  (2 Tim. 3: 16- 17)

Dear friends, I don’t want to put a burden over you, or the feeling that you NEED to read ALL the Bible in a year. Many of you, I am sure, have little ones and you hardly have time to read a few chapters every day. My encouragement is that you put every effort to dig deeper into ALL the Bible. If it is little by little, that is perfect, but read, eventually, through all of it. It will be good, very good for you, if you can read a few books in depth, with a commentary at hand this year. Try it and you will see how much you will reap!

May His grace abound as we feast on His Word this year!

Becky is a Mexican living in one of the most crowded cities in the world, Mexico City. She has been happily married to an incredible man for almost 20 years. They have four children (from lower grammar to College) and have homeschooled them following the Classical Christian Education model. Becky enjoys the big books and the small books, she loves to study God’s word and read mostly, from dead authors, like the Puritans. She currently teaches Spanish at Veritas Press Scholars; loves to take out her watercolors on a sunny Saturday and paint, and you will always see her with her camera ready to capture the simple everyday moments that make up her days. She loves to bake muffins for her family on Saturdays while they are still asleep, so they wake up to the sweet smell of home. You can find Becky on her main blog Daily On My Way to Heaven.

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Gospel Parenting… Old, But New

Jun 15, 2011 by

“We need much less of Veggie Tales and Barney and tons more of the radical, bloody, scandalous message of God made man and crushed by his Father for our sin.” (Give Them Grace)

I am going to start this review out a little differently than most. I am going to admit that I was initially reluctant to read this book. I mean, I was both excited and suspicious of it all at once if you can imagine that. Things were being said like, “It is the best parenting book ever written!” and “This book is the parenting book that all others will be compared to!”. In my mind I couldn’t help but think, this is some pretty high praise! It seemed as though people were claiming that the pages of Give Them Grace held some new, overlooked, and incredible parenting truth that hadn’t been tapped before.

Old but New

The truth is there is nothing new in the pages of Give Them Grace. In fact it simply reiterates a very, very old message: the gospel message. Surprisingly enough the gospel message is the new, overlooked, and incredible parenting truth that makes Give Them Grace such an important resource for parents (and ultimately for every other person who picks it up!).

It is a sad fact that this book is desperately needed in the church today. It is a sad truth that this book was desperately needed in my life today. It is a glorious truth that the message within its pages is able to transform and elevate our parenting to heights only God can foresee.

Parenting in Grace

In this book, Elyse Fitzpatrick and daughter Jessica Thompson often refer to two different types of parents. The first is the parent who is overwhelmed by the burden and weight of parenthood and the effect of every one of their failings on their children’s souls. The other parent is the parent who is somewhat confident in their parenting and their “methods” believing that if they simply do X, Y, and Z God will keep his end of the bargain and bless them with God-fearing offspring. Both of these parents need the gospel for themselves and both of them need the gospel for their parenting because both of them are relying on their own ability, rather than the grace of God for their children’s salvation.

This is where I began to awaken to my need for this book. I hadn’t realized before how much I was relying on my own strength to parent my children. Without knowing it I had been assuming or at least hoping that my efforts would not go unnoticed by my Savior and that he would reward me for all my hard work… as though my hard work were worth anything in heavenly currency! It is a funny paradox, but my adherence to the Biblical guidelines for parenting and my personal testimony to my children had become unholy bargaining chips with the Ruler of the Universe. This is a message that all of us need to hear, not just parents: our works are worthless, it is Christ who saves, Christ who transforms, Christ who accomplishes. God has a plan for each of my children, he will use me in that plan yes, but nothing I do or don’t do will thwart his plan. This call to yield to the grace of God in our children’s lives is reminiscent of Paul’s exhortation to the Corinthians when they were tempted to put too much stock in their spiritual leaders:

So neither he who plants nor he who waters is anything, but only God who gives the growth. He who plants and he who waters are one, and each will receive his wages according to his labor. For we are God’s fellow workers. You are God’s field, God’s building.(1 Corinthians 3:7-9 ESV)

This is one of the key themes of the book, but as the title suggests raising our children in an atmosphere of gospel grace is the primary focus.

An Atmosphere of Grace

Elyse and Jessica begin, continue, and end with one premise throughout their book: our children (and ultimately us as well) do not need more law, we need more grace. They put forth the observation that most of what we call Christian parenting these days is in fact parenting under the law rather than under grace. The temptation to be law givers instead of grace givers is at the core of our natural idolatrous hearts:

“…every human heart is always and ever drawn to law. In the same way that iron filings follow a magnet, our hearts chase after rules-not because we ever really obey them but because we think they make life manageable. Rules elevate us to the position of lawgiver; they help us avoid the humiliation of prostrating ourselves before a bloody, despicable cross. We love to try to approve of ourselves and control others by generating more and more rules. ‘Our desire to please God, combined with human bent to prove our acceptance by comparison with and the control of others, makes us factories of human legislation.’” (Give Them Grace)

As Christians it is our goal to put Christ and his gospel at the center of every aspect of our lives and yet the thing Elyse and Jessica seem to want us to get more than anything is that we have missed it in our parenting. How can this be?

This is what I think it boils down to: We have been taught that good Christian parents teach their children how to be obedient (reflecting our obedience of God) and then when they disobey (just as we disobey God) we discipline them (just as we are disciplined by God) and then, on our best days, we share the gospel story with them reminding them that if they believe in Jesus he paid the price for their sins and they will never again have to suffer for them. In a gospel saturated home Elyse and Jessica propose that this is not enough. All of this is true, but there is one important piece of the puzzle that is missing, you named it-grace.

The temptation for children in this daily cycle of comparing themselves to the law is to see themselves as either good or bad children. The bad children, those who are always sinning, always being disciplined, are tempted to think that the gospel isn’t for them, that they aren’t good enough for the gospel or for God. The good children, on the other hand, those who find it easier to obey, are tempted to see themselves as good, earning the favor of God, and unknowingly without a need for a Savior. Both children live in perilous states of mind because they are not able to apply the gospel to their little hearts. One needs to see that the gospel is indeed for sinners and the other needs to see that each of us are sinners and are hopeless without the grace of God.

In a family where God’s grace is a living, breathing, reality (not just a piece of head knowledge) a parent would indeed call their child to obedience, after all the law is meant to show us our sin, but they would do so fully aware of their children’s inability to obey. When their children fail, and of course they will, we are to remind them that it is because of their sinful nature that they failed and that this is exactly why Jesus had to die on the cross- to pay for our sin and to liberate us from the power of sin. We should not be shocked when our children sin, but instead should identify with them and their need for a Savior in those moments. Our lips must be bursting forth with praise for the power we have to overcome sin through Jesus Christ. What Jessica and Elyse are encouraging us to do is to take the focus off of our children’s ability to obey and put it on Christ’s power to obey for them and to help them to see this glorious truth as well.

So where does discipline fit into this picture? This is an area I wish they had fleshed out a little more, though they did commit an entire chapter to it. Physical discipline is affirmed as Biblical and indeed necessary, but a very important point is made in this book: Though God does use the rod to drive foolishness from the heart of a child, the gospel is the only means by which your child will be saved. Foolishness can be driven out of a Muslim child’s heart by the rod just as easily as foolishness in a Christian child’s heart can. What makes our discipline life giving and Christ exalting is the message of God’s grace that motivates and surrounds it. It is the grace of God that will transform our children’s hearts, not spanking them. If we spank our children into submission, we may end up with very well behaved children who believe themselves to be good and without the need of a Savior. Though physical discipline is a useful and God ordained tool to train our children, it is not the tool that God uses to transform our children. That work must be left to the Holy Spirit and the grace of God. You may be thinking, of course I understand this! But the importance of this point is not the knowledge, but the application. It can be easy to think that we are doing well in our parenting as our children get more and more obedient, as we assume they are becoming more and more godly, when in reality they may simply be becoming greater hypocrites.

“You are Such a Good Boy! … or are you?”

The implications of Gospel saturated parenting are so far reaching that it can be overwhelming to try to reorient yourself. Elyse and Jessica liken it to a scary amusement park ride where your greatest fear is your utter lack of control. Learning to distance ourselves and our children from a works based relationship with God is harder than you might think. One great example given in the book is the common expression “You are such a good boy!”. Well is he really? Because the Bible says that no one is good, only God is good. In fact, even our good deeds are like filthy rags! Obviously we are not trying to tell our children that they are holy when we say such a thing, but the underlying message we are sending them is that they can be good by doing good things rather than trusting in the only Good One who did the good things for them! A more Biblical responce to your child’s “good” behavior would be to say something along the lines of, “That was a very good thing you did Elliot, I am so thankful that God gave you the grace to do it!” This might seem like an unnessesary change, but it makes a world of difference in what you are teaching your child. In this second interaction your child is learning that what he did was indeed good, but that it was the power of God that allowed him to do it.

This is the reason why I believe this book to be so important: because living a gospel driven life affects every aspect of our lives (including our speech). How important is it that we live our lives aware of our very real need for God’s grace and the God who delights to shed it on us? How important is it that we teach our children how great their need is for God’s grace and the abundance of grace available to them as well? There is no greater task that we can set ourselves to!

This book is like a whirlwind of pure unadulterated gospel, whipping up the sea of works-based parenting that has long saturated the Christian community. It is a glimpse into a way of parenting that is distinctly and honestly Christian. This is the atmosphere I want my children to grow up in. I want them to know that they are sinners, that I am a sinner, and that we have a great and mighty Savior who loved us so much that he lived a life of perfect obedience so that we too could obey, who died a horrific death so that we would never have to die, and who rose from the grave so that we too could rise with him for all of eternity!

Thank you Elyse and Jessica for stirring up a renewed vision for what it means to be a Christian mommy!

 

This amazing book is being offered in a giveaway that ends Thursday night, make sure to enter for your chance to win Give Them Grace!

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Riches in Store

May 19, 2011 by

Wondering where you can find more goodness on the riches of God’s grace that I talked about on Tuesday? Let me recommend Paul David Tripp’s Book “War of Words” to you. I cannot tell you how much I love this book! If you have ever struggled with speaking in a loving, redeeming way… (really, can any of you say that you have never struggled with this?) then I would plead with you to read this book. Here is a particularly encouraging excerpt:

Paul says that there are “glorious riches in Christ.” What is he talking about here? Peter captures it well when he says that “his divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness” (2 Peter 1:3). Not a lot, not more than most, but everything we need. Consider the words here. The verb in the passage (“has given”) is in the perfect tense, which indicates an action in the past that has a continuing result into the future. It means that Christ has already placed in my storehouse everything that I need. “To do what?” you may ask. Peter says, “everything for life and godliness.” I have been given not just everything I need for eternal life, but everything I need to live a godly life from the time I am saved until the time God takes me home to be with him!

 

Let the power of these words sink in. The Lord will never put you in a situation without giving you everything you need to do what he has called you to do.

 

Let’s say that you are a wife, who is in a very difficult converstaion with you husband. There are riches in your storehouse for this momet. Perhaps you ar a worker struggling with a very critical boss. Everything you need to speak in a godly way has already been given. Parent, you are facing another day with a rebellious and disrespectful teenager. All the riches that you need to move beyond your own hurt an danger and to function as an instrument of the Lord have been given. The Word has come and in his hands are glorious riches. His supply is the only thing that will tame the human tongue!

Yes, this is life altering news from the gospel of Jesus Christ!

Let’s live it.

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Why Theology is Important

Mar 23, 2011 by

Why Theology is Important

If you don’t know Richard and I personally, then you may not know that we are pretty passionate about theology. Don’t let the term scare you, theology is simply the study of God. In fact whether you know it or not, you (yes you!) are a theologian. If you find that hard to believe, consider this quote by R.C. Sproul:

Countless times I have heard Christians say, ‘Why do I need to study doctrine or theology when all I need to know is Jesus?’ My immediate reply is this; ‘Who is Jesus?’ As soon as we begin to answer that question, we are involved in doctrine and theology. Every Christian is a theologian. Perhaps not a theologian in the technical or professional sense, but a theologian nevertheless. The issue for Christians is not whether we are going to be theologians but whether we are going to be good theologians or bad ones. A good theologian is one who is instructed by God.

So why is it important to be instructed by God, as Sproul puts it? It seems silly to even pose such a question, but many people who claim the name of Christ actually know very little about him. They say they have Jesus in their hearts, but when pressed to explain their faith they find it very difficult to give an accurate definition of who this God they believe in is. Rather than gleaning truth from the Lord, they concoct their own doctrine based on personal experiences, influences, and ponderings. It is inevitable that if you are not instructed first and foremost by the Lord, you will be left to the wisdom of your own (sinful) heart and that of the (sinful) world around you.

Even if you decide that you will simply put yourself under the influence of the most respected of Biblical scholars, while abdicating your own personal study of the Word of God you leave yourself open to being deceived.

Relevent Example:

Concider the recent release of Rob Bell’s book Love Wins. What if you are a passionate follower of Bell’s ministry (I am not advocating it in any sense, but stay with me)? Perhaps your faith was deeply affected by his earlier works, or you have sat under his teaching since becoming a Christian. Many people count Bell as one of their greatest spiritual influences. How will those people respond to his encouragement to drop the “unloving” doctrine of hell if they have no personal theological knowledge? Will they simply believe that because he has more knowledge than they do that he must be right? Many will. Many have.

Discernment is something that is grown. It is something that is watered by a constant intake of the Word of God. That life giving water washes over and through Rob Bell’s assertions and reveals them to be what they truly are: false.

Here is an example of a support Bell gives for believing that Jesus will eventually save all people (even those who reject him in this life):

“Jesus spoke of the renewal of all things. He said, ‘I have sheep who are not of this flock.’ Through him, extraordinary things are happening in the world.” -Rob Bell

That sounds legit, right? Wow, he can prove from scripture that God is going to save people who aren’t even from his “flock”! except that that is not what scripture says at all.

If you know your Bible, if you allow God to be the one instructing you and not Rob Bell, you will quickly remember that Jesus was not talking about saving those who never repent, but talking about bringing the Gentiles to salvation who were formerly far away from it (as Paul explains in Ephesians).

Here is the text Rob Bell is alluding to:

“And I have other sheep that are not of this fold. I must bring them also, and they will listen to my voice. So there will be one flock, one shepherd.” (John 10:16 ESV)

Notice that Jesus assures his disciples that those sheep from outside the fold will indeed “hear his voice”. They will come to repentence, Jesus is going to bring them!

Here is Paul’s explaination of this marvelous salvation of the Gentiles:

“But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down in his flesh the dividing wall of hostility by abolishing the law of commandments expressed in ordinances, that he might create in himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, and might reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby killing the hostility. And he came and preached peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near. For through him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father. So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole structure, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord. In him you also are being built together into a dwelling place for God by the Spirit.” (Ephesians 2:13-22 ESV)

Here Paul makes it abundantly clear that those who were “far off” have gained access to God through Christ Jesus. Without belief in Christ, there would be no salvations for these Gentiles. But here we are today, Gentiles, receiving the same blessings (salvation) as the Jews (we are now one flock).

Unfortunately if you had never studied these sections of scripture you could easily be swayed by Bell’s “compassionate” reasoning. After all, Jesus IS in fact doing extraordinary things.

This is just an example, one that is relevant.

No teacher (pastor, evangelist, author, blogger, professor) should have your allegience before the very Word of God. And you must know the Word of God before you can compare it to anyone’s teaching.

But why does it matter?

Again the question arrises, is there more to theology than head knowledge? Is it practical? Does it impact my daily life? Why does your knowledge of God demand your attention as a wife, as a homemaker, as a mother? The answer is, how could it not? Theology isn’t an end in and of itself. It is a means to an end.

Studying God is the road to a deeper relationship with him.

It is the bridge to greater confidence and trust in him.

It is a staircase to his heart that we must climb in order to gain the heat of his love for us.

It is the wealth from which we open our hands and give to those who have nothing.

We need theology because we need to know God.

Let me encourage you to  take on the challenge of being instructed by God. The Bible is your direct access to your Creator, King, and Savior. He has place the Holy Spirit within your soul to teach and instruct you. Don’t neglect the incredible gifts you have been given as a child of the Holy One.

Where to Start:

Your Bible.

Wayne Grudem’s Systematic Theology… basically the standard by which all other systematic theology books are measured these days. It is big, but simple to understand. Don’t be alarmed by the size (this is God we are talking about, how much could be written about him?).

Christian Beliefs: 20 Basics Every Christian Should Know by Wayne Grudem. Ok, so if you are alarmed, start with this one.

Knowing God by J.I. Packer. If you are looking for something a little less “text booky” this is a must read for every Christian and a great start for studying the doctrine of God.

If you are interested in reading more in-depth thoughts on the book Love Wins visit these sites:

  1. We Have Seen All This Before: Rob Bell and the (Re)Emergence of Liberal Theology @ AlbertMohler.com
  2. The Blood-Drained Gospel of Rob Bell @ Moore to the Point
  3. Revising Hell into the Heterodox Mainstream @ DennyBurk.com
  4. Love Wins-A Review of Rob Bell’s New Book @ Tim Challies.com

 

 

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