The Next Story: Life and Faith after the Digital Explosian is free this month from Christian Audio.
Author: Steve Coward
Tim Keller on MSNBC
VideosTim Keller was on MSNBC’s Morning Joe this morning. It was a very good interview. Watch it below.
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
The Pastor and the Kitten
It's Funny Because It's True, VideosGreat to hear one of Steve Brown’s stories this morning . . . listen and enjoy!
Eight Ways to Ruin Accountability
Life, The Church
If you want to find out how, check out the list at The Resurgence. Here are my favorites:
1. Make your accountability partner drop ten bucks in the jar for that grievous sin.
2. Make your accountability a circle of cheap confession by which you obtain cheap peace for your troubled conscience.
5. Go public with your respectable sins while cherishing your secret sins.
8. Make accountability, not Jesus, central to your group.”
Go check out the rest of the list.
from Grace Alone: How the Grace of God Amazes Me
BooksHere’s a couple of great quotes from Grace Alone: How the Grace of God Amazes Me by Sinclair B. Ferguson.
Being amazed by God’s grace is a sign of spiritual vitality. It is a litmus test of how firm and real is our grasp of the Christian gospel and how close is our walk with Jesus Christ. The growing Christian finds that the grace of God astonishes and amazes.
We do not become sinners by committing specific acts. We commit specific acts of sin because we are sinners. In short, my problem is not the isolated actions that I see as aberrations from what I really am. I am deceiving myself if I think that way. These actions are not aberrations but revelations of what is in my heart. They show that I commit sin because I am in bondage to it.
Here, then, are two sure signs that our religion, even if we call it Christian, is not the real thing. We are not made happy by seeing the grace of God touch the lives of needy men and women so that they are brought to faith in Jesus Christ, and we neither see nor feel any special need for forgiveness for ourselves. We do not see ourselves as “one of nought.”
What Christ is doing in you is still incomplete. But in what Jesus Christ has done for you there is not a single tiny crack that the satanic arrows can penetrate.
Tim Keller Interview
VideosEnjoy this interview with Tim Keller from Desiring God. He shares about his background, ministry experiences, and his new book, Generous Justice.
Part 1:
Part 2:
A World Without Jobs
Lifearticle from Andy Crouch: A World Without Jobs: The gospel of a secular age
Steve Jobs’s gospel is, in the end, a set of beautifully polished empty promises. But I look on my secular neighbors, millions of them, like sheep without a shepherd, who no longer believe in anything they cannot see, and I cannot help feeling compassion for them, and something like fear. When, not if, Steve Jobs departs the stage, will there be anyone left who can convince them to hope?
Thoughts for Election Day
Culture, Life
“Politics in a democracy is a whole lot more complicated than either political parties or your pastor tell you it is; treat it as such–learn about the issues and think for yourself.”
“When it comes to listening to the news, Christians should be eclectic in their approach and not depend merely on those pundits who simply confirm their view of the world while self-evidently using terminology, logic, and standard rules of evidence and argumentation in sloppy, tendentious, and sometimes frankly dishonest ways….”
“Now, let me go on record and say that I am happy enough not to be walking around, looking like an extra for a low-budget movie about Elton John’s early career; I enjoy having nice, new things and not being stared at for all the wrong reasons as I walk down the street. My point is rather this: be aware that not all the effects of capitalism are unconditional goods, consistent with the gospel and with the Christian mind-set; we need to be as self-aware of the impact of this way of life as that of any other.”
“Christians are to be good citizens, to take their civic responsibilities seriously, and to respect the civil magistrates appointed over us. We also need to acknowledge that the world is a lot more complicated than the pundits of Fox News (or MSNBC) tell us. We must never engage in the kind of inappropriate behavior of those who carry around pictures of our appointed leaders as criminals, or who scream mindless abuse at those with whom they disagree. Christian politics, so often associated now with loudmouthed aggression, needs rather to be an example of thoughtful, informed engagement with the issues and appropriate involvement with the democratic process. And that requires a culture of change. We need to read and watch more widely, be as critical of our own favored pundits and narratives as we are of those cherished by our opponents, and seek to be good stewards of the world and of the opportunities therein that God has given to us.”“We need to avoid this marginalization of the voice of Christians in politics by realizing the limits of politics and the legitimacy of Christians, disagreeing on a host of actual policies, and by earning a reputation for thoughtful, informed, and measured political involvement.”
Sermon – True Greatness, Matthew 18.1-6 (October 3, 2010)
sermonThe sermon I preached two weeks ago on Matthew 18.1-6 has just been posted.
Listen here:
Download here: http://www.theidolfactory.com/sermons/true-greatness-matthew-181-6-october-3-2010.html
What the Congregation is Really Thinking
It's Funny Because It's True, sermonSince I am preaching this week, I found this especially funny. Of course, it is not 100% true … but it’s probably more true than I would hope.
It is especially helpful this week, since I am preaching on humility. 🙂
By David Hayword. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.