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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Is Your Life Defined By A Ladder Or A Cross?


TULLIAN TCHIVIDJIAN|7:39 AM CT
Believe it or not, the familiar story of the Tower of Babel teaches us more than we ever thought about the nature of sin, God’s grace, and the reality of descending one-way love. It’s the entire message of the Bible in a nutshell:
There are things in life that can tell us what kind of person you are: chunky peanut butter, or smooth? Regular cola, or diet? It seems to me that the same is true when it comes to reading the Bible. Do you read the Bible as a helpful tool in your climb up toward moral betterment or as the story of God coming down to broken, sinful people?
In a very real way, our lives are defined by how we answer that question. Specifically, our lives are defined either by a cross or by a ladder. The ladder symbolizes our ascension—our effort to “go up.” The cross symbolizes God’s descension—his coming down.
There is no better story in the Old Testament, or perhaps the whole Bible, for depicting the difference between the ladder-defined life and the cross-defined life than that of the Tower of Babel.
Read the rest here.
Posted by John Bracken at 7/23/2013 10:47:00 AM No comments:

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Should We Tell Children to Love Jesus?

Here's are some profound thoughts in witnessing to our children from John Piper. Here's the first portion of the article...

Permalinkby John Piper | July 2, 2013

Spurgeon was concerned about the emphasis of telling children to love Jesus rather than trust Jesus. He expressed it like this:


Many [distort the doctrine of justification by faith] when addressing children, and I notice that they generally speak to little ones about loving Jesus, and not upon believing him. This must leave a mischievous impression upon youthful minds and take them off from the true way of peace. (Lectures to My Students, Vol. 2, 1889, p. 270)
It is a legitimate concern. Trust is more concretely demonstrable for children than love. A little child can be told to jump from the fourth step and daddy will catch him. “Trust me. I will catch you.” They can grasp that at two years old.
Similarly, a small child can grasp the application to Jesus: He will always be there to take care of you. In fact, he died once, to save and protect you. You will understand that more someday.
But what it means to love Jesus is not so easily demonstrable. Loving Jesus is more emotionally complex. It includes perceiving the qualities that make Jesus a beautiful and excellent person, worthy of our highest admiration. It involves treasuring Jesus for perfections that set him off from all others. This is not as easy for a child to grasp.
Emphasizing a child’s duty to love Jesus more than emphasizing the need to trust him may cause a distortion of love into a set of deeds. Children are wired to translate all perceived duties into deeds.
But that is not what love is. It is before and beneath deeds. When Jesus said, “If you love me, you will keep my commandments” (John 14:15), he meant that love precedes and enables obedience, not that love is obedience.
On the other hand, sooner or later, we will need to help our children realize that saving trust in Jesus has love for Jesus in it. And true love for Jesus has trust in Jesus in it.
Saving trust in Jesus banks on the truth that Christ died for us in order to make himself the eternal, all-satisfying treasure of our lives. The gospel is the “gospel of the glory of Christ” (2 Corinthians 4:4). He prayed for us: “Father . . . may they be with me where I am, to see my glory” (John 17:24).
Since the work of Jesus was done to give us himself to love forever, we cannot say we trust in him to do his work for us, while not treasuring the gift that he died to give — himself.
And loving Jesus always includes trusting Jesus to achieve all he said he would, because one of the things we love about him is his trustworthiness and his perfect mercy and justice shown best in the cross.
Continue Reading 

Posted by John Bracken at 7/02/2013 10:08:00 AM No comments:
Labels: Children and Salvation, Faith, gospel, Love

Monday, June 24, 2013

Redefining Marriage's Impact on Religious Liberty

The following two portions of articles deal with the overlooked issue of Religious Liberty as it relates to gay marriage. 

Worth Reading #1

The Heart of the Issue on Legal Gay Marriage

by Denny Burk on JUNE 24, 2013 in CHRISTIANITY, POLITICS
Ben Domenech has a must-read commentary on gay marriage and the future of religious liberty. He argues that most of the public debate about gay marriage is peripheral chatter—spousal benefits, raising children, or redefining a foundational social institution. He contends that the fundamental issue in this debate is whether religious liberty will continue in the United States. I wish I could reprint the entire column here, but I can’t. Here’s a snippet:
The real problem with gay marriage is that the nature of the marriage union is inherently entwined in the future of the first line of the Bill of Rights: our right to religious liberty. Orthodox believers of Christian, Muslim, and Jewish faiths were slow to understand this. I’m talking about something much bigger here than the discrimination lawsuits brought across the country against bakers and photographers: I’m talking about whether churches will be able to function as public entities in an era where their views on sin, particularly sexual sin, are in direct conflict with not just opinion but the law – and proselytizing those views from the pulpit or in the public square will be viewed as using the protection of religious expression to protect hateful speech.
We saw this problem already in Illinois’ marriage law, where churches that do not allow same sex unions would essentially have to close their doors to full participation in civil society. We see it as a constant issue regarding Canada’s hate speech laws, where courts must discern whether quoting Bible verses amounts to “harming the public discourse.” We will see it more here. That obvious oncoming clash strikes me as the most troublesome aspect of this, and the one that has received the least attention in the rush to legalize. The argument has been more about benefits and social outcomes and “won’t somebody think of the children”, ignoring the core problem, which raises challenges to the freedom of speech and expression the likes of which led to the pilgrims crossing the sea in the first place.
The conflict between sexual liberty and religious liberty is unlikely to be one the religious will win, in large part because of the broad and increasing acceptance of an idea President Obama has espoused more than once in public: that the religious have a freedom to worship, and that’s where it ends. When you leave the pew, you must leave your faith there. Among the religious, this is absurd – their entire lives are defined by their faith, in ways large and small. For both Christianity and Islam, the core of their faith is built on a call to take the message to the world, spreading it through public witness and preaching. Yet this belief in the limited freedom to worship is what led Obama’s administration to argue that faith-based hiring and firing is a discriminatory act for religious entities. It will lead to similar cases in the years to come regarding the marriage issue, but not just focused in that space – expect it to factor in divorce proceedings, custody battles, and more points involving the nice folks from Child Protective Services. Expect it also to factor in dramatically expanding the scope of these discrimination lawsuits – think on the doctor in California who was brought up on discrimination charges for referring a lesbian couple to a colleague for artificial insemination.Read the rest here. I have said this before, and I will say it again. Americans have not even begun to think seriously about the implications of redefining marriage. There will be consequences that we all have to live with and that won’t be easy to roll-back once we’re all in.
Christians, you need to be paying attention. Religious liberty is on the line, and it will eventually affect you.

Worth Reading #2
The Tax Man Cometh
Finally, consider the matter of tax exemption. In its 1983 ruling in Bob Jones University v. United States, the Supreme Court affirmed, by an 8-1 vote, the power of the Internal Revenue Service to declare that it was “contrary to public policy,” since the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the Court’s own 1967 decision in Loving v. Virginia overturning bans on interracial marriage, to grant tax-exempt status to a religious university that admitted both white and black students but forbade them to date and marry one another. All nine justices presumed the sincerity of the university’s stated religious rationale for its policy, and none of them (even the lone dissenter) thought it mattered a bit. The Court’s decision forced Bob Jones University to change its policy.
One can deplore that university’s former policy and applaud the change that was forced on it. But we must recognize that the Bob Jones precedent is a loaded gun waiting to be picked up and used against religious schools, universities, social service agencies, hospitals and clinics, and charitable ministries of all kinds. If same-sex marriage is the new normal, and dissent from it on religious grounds is the new bigotry, then with a stroke of a pen the IRS can destroy the tax-exempt status of every para-church institution in the country that is not on board with the redefinition of marriage—and perhaps of the core institutions too, the churches, synagogues, and mosques themselves.
Click here for the whole article

Posted by John Bracken at 6/24/2013 06:12:00 PM No comments:

Monday, April 1, 2013

Ten Reasons to Consider Giving Online


mobilegiving
Churches are jumping on the online giving trend in record numbers. Most find it a safe and efficient way to help their members with consistent stewardship. Has your church started offering it yet?
Here are 10 reasons your church might want to consider online giving.
  1. Your members will appreciate the church making it easier for them to give. And many of the people in your congregation already are accustomed to the process of using credit or debit cards online.
  2. Many of the younger people in your congregation don’t carry cash or checkbooks.
  3. It’s not just young pastors doing this. According to a LifeWay Research study, 62 percent of churches that use online giving have pastors over age 50.
  4. People spend money online; why not encourage them to give money online?
  5. The Federal Reserve said the number of checks written between 2006 and 2009 declined by more than 7 percent. In the same period, electronic payments increased more than 9 percent. Electronic payments counted for more than 75 percent of all financial transactions in 2010.
  6. It’s easy to remind people on your website, in your newsletter or in the bulletin that online giving is an option.
  7. If you are uncomfortable suggesting people use credit cards for giving, you still have options. They can use debit cards, automated bank drafts, mobile giving, online bill pay, etc.
  8. Online giving can help members keep their giving consistent during the “slump” times like holiday seasons and summers. When they sign up for automatic payments, they can be obedient in their giving if they have to miss church for some reason. And it also allows homebound members the opportunity to give even when they can’t attend.
  9. Many of your members are already giving online to other charitable organizations.
  10. While only about 4 percent of Americans practice tithing, online giving can help church members be more consistent in their giving through automatic withdrawals from their bank accounts or credit cards.

From: Lifeway



Posted by John Bracken at 4/01/2013 09:35:00 PM No comments:

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Smart Tips to Prepare for DST


Therefore it says, “Awake, O sleeper, and arise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.” 15 Look carefully then how you walk, not as unwise but as wise, 16 making the best use of the time, because the days are evil. Ephesians 5:14-16 (ESV) 
This Sunday, March 10th, clocks are "officially" turned forward at 2:00 AM to 3:00 AM. Most Americans will wait to begin their adjustment on Sunday night. But for those who value worshiping Jesus we need to begin to make our adjustments sooner. 
Why? Because Jesus' followers are serious about worshiping our Lord and the Lord's Day provides a unique opportunity for us to do that. The week following the DST changes is often very difficult for most people. Worship energizes our spiritual batteries and every one of us can't afford to miss that. 
Here are some tips:                
  1. Start early in order to reduce the disruption. To give yourself more time to adjust before the new week begins, reset one of your clocks at the start of the weekend, such as Friday afternoon. Try to eat meals, sleep, and wake according to that clock. Going to bed 15 to 20 minutes earlier each night for a few days before the switch gives your body time to adjust.
  2. Exercise releases serotonin, a chemical in the brain that helps our bodies adjust. Exercise preferably outdoors, and early in the day. A brisk morning walk is perfect. Avoid exercising too late in the evening though, as it could interfere with your sleep.
  3. Take advantage of your longer evenings. Instead of feeling down about losing an hour of sleep and waking up in the dark, know that a later sunset also means that summer is getting closer! Use that extra hour of daylight at night to do something healthy for your mind or body. With the time change, attending Praise & Prayer beginning Sunday, at 6 PM will allow you further opportunity to be energized spiritually and to be home before dark. 


Posted by John Bracken at 3/05/2013 05:13:00 PM No comments:
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Prayerfully Ponder

Great Quotes

"Lord Jesus Christ, I admit that I am weaker and more sinful than I ever before believed, but, through you, I am more loved and accepted than I ever dared hope. I thank you for paying my debt, bearing my punishment and offering forgiveness. I turn from my sin and receive you as Savior. Amen."

Source: Timothy Keller http://www.monergism.com/thethreshold/articles/bio/timkeller.html

"He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose" Jim Elliot

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About Me

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John Bracken
I truly love my wife and best friend Bonnie. We have been married since December 1989. We have two bright and beautiful children, Ben and Laura who entered High School this past fall [2008]. I am priviledged to serve a wonderful congregation as pastor - First Baptist Church, Lakeland, GA just to the northeast of Valdosta. We are blessed to have a very dedicated core of believers and we are growing spiritually and numerically. You can get the latest on me at: http://twitter.com/jbsga http://www.facebook.com/johnbracken
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John, Bonnie, Ben & Laura

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      • Is Your Life Defined By A Ladder Or A Cross?
      • Should We Tell Children to Love Jesus?
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      • Redefining Marriage's Impact on Religious Liberty
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      • Ten Reasons to Consider Giving Online
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      • Smart Tips to Prepare for DST
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