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Archive for November, 2010

If you didn’t see this video on the Desiring God blog yesterday, please take five minutes to watch and be blessed!

Thank you to Children Desiring God and to the Watters’ family for sharing this wonderful testimony.

God was preparing them for great suffering, and then he called them to do an incredible thing in adopting – for his glory and their joy!

We all have a story to tell, one that focuses on who God is and what God has done for us.  Who can you tell your story to today?

As (Jesus) was getting into the boat, the man who had been possessed with demons begged him that he might be with him. And he did not permit him but said to him, “Go home to your friends and tell them how much the Lord has done for you, and how he has had mercy on you.” And he went away and began to proclaim in the Decapolis how much Jesus had done for him, and everyone marveled. Mark 5:18-20

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As I mentioned yesterday, the Evangelical Theological Society is having their annual meeting this week, focusing on the theme “justification by faith.”

Just a few hours after writing that post I came across an example of why Biblical scholarship with the perspective that God is both sovereign and good is so important.

In her article, “Biblical And Theological Perspectives On Disability: Implications On The Rights Of Persons With Disability In Kenya,” Pauline Otieno properly connects an understanding of the Bible with how people behave, including how that influences government systems.

One of the major root causes for the discriminatory acts against PWD (people with disabilities) in Kenya is religion-related. Theological interpretations of disability have significantly shaped the ways in which society relates to PWD. The Bible is intermingled with texts that have been interpreted in oppressive ways and together these continue to reinforce the marginalization and exclusion of PWD in the social, economic, political, and religious life of the society (emphasis mine).

She is correct; the Bible has been interpreted in oppressive ways.  I would contend those interpretations are inaccurate at best.

Unfortunately, she makes sweeping generalizations that are not accurate:

The New Testament also supports the link between sin and disability. This link is well illustrated in John 9:1-3. The disciples anticipated a connection between disability and sin with the question: “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” This question implies that disability was the punishment meant for some unspecified sin. When Jesus healed the physically impaired man who lay by the pool of Bethesda, He said to him: “See, you are well again. Stop sinning or something worse will happen to you” (Jn. 5:14). This clearly indicates that Jesus thought there was a connection between the man’s disability and some sin. In the portico lay a multitude of PWD and this comment applied to them as well (Jn. 5:3).

Neither Biblical account supports her conclusion!  Of course, Jesus himself answers the disciples’ question in John 9:3:

Jesus answered, “It was not that this man sinned, or his parents, but that the works of God might be displayed in him.”

And the “something worse” in John 5:14 is eternal punishment, not another disabling condition, as Pastor John helpfully articulates:

And yes, he warns him that, if he turns away, and mocks this gift, or makes an idol out of his health, and embraces sin as his way of life, he will perish. I take that—final judgment—to be the “worse thing” (in verse 14) that will happen because there aren’t many natural things worse than the 38 years this man endured, and because in verses 28–29, Jesus says, “An hour is coming when all who are in the tombs will hear his voice and come out, those who have done good to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of judgment.” (John Piper, Healed for the Sake of Holiness, August 23, 2009)

What is particularly frustrating about Dr. Otieno’s article is that it is very well written and she has clearly given this a great deal of thought.  This article is full of scriptural references, and she has looked directly at some of the most difficult passages on disability in the Bible.

But it is not written from the perspective that this is God’s story, that he is a holy God, that he has sovereign authority over his creation, that he is entirely good, that he is completely merciful, and that anything that draws us closer to him and into treasuring Jesus above all things is better than anything in this life.  Even a life full of suffering and exclusion because of disability – which he has ordained – does not compare to an eternity of increasing joy spent with Jesus.

And that is why we should pray for the gathering of the Evangelical Theological Society this week.  Disciplined, smart people write articles about the Bible all the time – and get it wrong.  It is God alone who gives new life, eyes to see, and a desire to make much of him.

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The Evangelical Theological Society is meeting this week from Wednesday through Friday.  Their theme this year is “Justification by Faith.”

Why should those of us dealing with disability care if a bunch of smart people get together to talk about these things?

Because how they reason together and think about this issue influences both this and the next generation of leaders in our colleges, seminaries and churches.  Issues discussed at this gathering will impact churches.

A right understanding of justification is immensely important to this issue of disability:

What makes radical, risk-taking, sacrificial, Christ-exalting works of love possible is the fact that Christ’s perfect obedience (counted as our righteousness) and Christ’s perfect sacrifice (counted as our punishment) secured completely the glorious reality that God is for us as an omnipotent Father who works all things together for our everlasting joy in him.  If we begin to deny or minimize the importance of the obedience of Christ, imputed to us through faith alone, our own works will begin to assume the role that should have been Christ’s. As that happens, over time (perhaps generations), the works of love themselves will be severed from their root in the Christ-secured assurance that God is totally for us.  In this way, for the sake of exalting the importance of love, we will undermine the very thing that makes them possible.

Yet the freedom and the courage to love is what the world desperately needs to see in the church and from the church. The world does not need to see strident, triumphalistic evangelicals laying claim on their rights.  The world needs to see the radical, risk-taking, Christ-exalting sacrifice of humble love that makes us willing to lay down our lives for the good of others, without the demand of reward on this earth. For the sake of this display of the glory of Christ, I plead for our allegiance to a robust, biblical, historical vision of Christ whose obedience is counted as ours through faith alone. John Piper, The Future of Justification: A Response to N.T. Wright, pp. 187-188.

Disability (usually) shatters the illusion of independence we probably lived under before God graciously removed that illusion from our lives.  We need God to call other people to get involved with us in our churches to make disability ministry happen; we need them to freely love without any anticipation of reward on this earth (but isn’t God good to frequently give them affections for us and for our children that feels like a reward to them!).  We need God to help them see that people with disabilities are gifts to the church and have gifts for the church.

Similarly, we should be very wary of the ‘hero’ status that some people want to confer on us for parenting children with disabilities.  It is God’s strength that allows us to continue every day; it is God’s grace that lets us see him for who he is – perfect in all his ways and all his works, and able to make ‘all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose’ (Romans 8:28).

This emphasis on justification would be reason enough for us to care about this gathering.  But in addition to that emphasis for the plenary sessions, there will be papers presented and discussed on issues of deep importance in the areas of bioethics and health.  For example, Catholic ethicist, philosopher and Baylor professor Francis Beckwith is presenting a paper, Recent Challenges to Fetal Personhood: A Critical Analysis.

So, please pray for this gathering of scholars and pastors and seminary students, that God would be given all the glory, and they would stay true to their doctrinal basis:

The Bible alone, and the Bible in its entirety, is the Word of God written and is therefore inerrant in the autographs. God is a Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, each an uncreated person, one in essence, equal in power and glory.

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Fast Company didn’t intend to do this, but they really encouraged my faith last week.

In their article, “Infographic of the Day: What the Bible Got Wrong,” the writer of the article concludes this way:

So to anyone who thinks the Bible’s the last word on anything, remember this: It isn’t even the last word on itself.

Sam Harris, the atheist skeptic and writer of Letter to a Christian Nation among other books, commissioned the infographic that Fast Company posted.  He hates the Bible and any notion about God.

But the conclusion he wants us to come to (and which the writer of the Fast Company article writes) isn’t exactly accurate.

Justin Taylor provides a helpful response on his blog:

I know what it’s like to be confused about, and bothered by, alleged contradictions in God’s Word. A good study Bible—e.g., the NIV Study Bible, now the ESV Study Bible—will intentionally address many of these issues.

“Alleged” is the right word – and we don’t need to be Ph.D.s to study these issues for ourselves!

But the answer I appreciated the most came from Matt Perman, a colleague with me at Desiring God:

However, the appearance of contradiction in many places in the Scriptures is there on purpose and by God’s design because this is the mark of any profound text and because it causes us to dig deeper, leading to far more profound insight.

God uses everything to make us dependent on him, including alleged contradictions in his word or difficult passages about his goodness in relation to suffering.  By going deeper and asking for the help of the Holy Spirit, we get to see more of God and understand even more about his sovereign goodness over all things.

The real danger isn’t that arguments like this come up but that we so quickly give up!  There’s a reason the Apostle Paul exhorts people to persevere!

Just a few days ago I wrote about how Satan hates our joy and seeks to cheapen it.  Creating doubt in God’s word is just another one of those tools.  Turning truth about actual events (like the miracles that Jesus performed) into allegories or fables is still another tool.

But, in the end, this is God’s word and God’s church and he will defend it.  Attacks that draw us deeper into the word and make us lean harder on God for answers do exactly the opposite than what people like Sam Harris want – God looks even greater, the Bible is even more authoritative, and my confidence that God is who he says he is rises.

Which anchors my hope in God even more securely.

People in our churches understand suffering very well.  For those of us dealing with disability, we know that circumstances can change in an instant.  Dianne spent time with mothers on Saturday who’s children are living with much more difficult disabilities than we are.

It is a comfort to know and feel and experience that God is who he says he is.  And anything, even attacks on his word, can be used by God to make much of him, for his glory and for our good.

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Saturday morning brought winter back to Minnesota – more than 6 inches of wet, slushy snow.  But as Caryn Turner wrote in her blog yesterday (and Dianne confirmed), it was worth it to make the trek to Eden Prairie!

Here’s a sample of what they heard:

Depression often occurs because we listen to ourselves instead of talk to ourselves. We need to turn off the thoughts of anxiety, fear, & doubt and start preaching God’s truth to ourselves.

Thank you, Mary Horning, for encouraging many hearts!  You can read the entire post here.

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Thank you to Matt Perman who God used through his blog to plant this blog post in my head.

We need more volunteers for the disability ministry at Bethlehem.  This is not a new problem – we always need more volunteers!

But we want to recruit volunteers in ways that feed their joy in Jesus above all things.

After all, we did not earn our right standing before God through good works or fulfilling the requirements of the law. We did nothing to gain favor with God.  In fact, we were running away from God as fast as we could!

For we ourselves were once foolish, disobedient, led astray, slaves to various passions and pleasures, passing our days in malice and envy, hated by others and hating one another. Titus 3:3

That describes me pretty well.

Thankfully, that isn’t the end of the story!

But when the goodness and loving kindness of God our Savior appeared, he saved us, not because of works done by us in righteousness, but according to his own mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit, whom he poured out on us richly through Jesus Christ our Savior, so that being justified by his grace we might become heirs according to the hope of eternal life. Titus 3:4-7

Isn’t that about the greatest sentence ever written?

And because that sentence is true, Paul is free to exhort people to do good works, for God’s glory and their joy, in response to what God has freely done for them:

The saying is trustworthy, and I want you to insist on these things, so that those who have believed in God may be careful to devote themselves to good works. These things are excellent and profitable for people. Titus 3:8

Not burdensome – excellent and profitable!

That leads to two very good things for those of us who see the need in the disability ministry:

  1. We can recruit freely, knowing that volunteering in the disability ministry could be the ‘good works’ God would have for some of his people.
  2. Those of us doing the recruiting, rather than being jealous or bitter when seeing people being called to do something other than the disability ministry, can be freely happy that people are doing those good works in other areas of the church and life!

And for those who are called into other kinds of good works, they can freely do those works, without any guilt at not being able to do every good work possible, including the disability ministry.  Because we know that God will supply every need, according to what is absolutely best for us.

Once again, God gets the glory and we get the joy!

So, please, pray like crazy that God would call more people to volunteer in this hard and happy work of the disability ministry at Bethlehem, and everywhere else there is a need, never out of guilt, but because they want to honor God and love people.

P.S.  Yes, we have all experienced that sweet irony of doing something out of less-than-purely-loving motives and discovered we enjoyed the experience and were filled up by it.  And I know that some people may have volunteered for the disability ministry out of guilt and then fell in love with the work God provided for them.  God does things like that all the time, turning hard hearts and bad motives into soft, loving hearts full of joy.  But I never want the recruitment message to be one that intentionally uses guilt as motivation!

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We have some new folks following this blog and I thought it might be helpful to highlight a few resources.

My friend, work colleague and BCS seminary student Bryan DeWire gathered this list of resources for the seminary students David and I spoke to this past Monday. Thank you, Bryan, for compiling it!

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We have a great advocate.  And we have a formidable enemy.

Pastor John has helpfully talked about Satan’s aims:

The great aim of Satan is to prevent and weaken and, if possible, destroy faith. . . Destroy faith. Destroy missions. Destroy people. And thus dishonor God. That is his aim. Satan uses pleasure and pain to do it. Pleasure: to make us doubt God’s satisfying greatness. Pain: to make us doubt God’s sovereign goodness.

So we should not be surprised that Satan would hate our children because of how God talks about those who are considered weaker:

On the contrary, the parts of the body that seem to be weaker are indispensable (1 Corinthians 12:22).

With disability, we already know Satan uses our suffering to attack our faith.

But he also cheapens pleasure in ways that feed the destruction of our faith – and encourages the literal destruction of our children. After all, if joy is cheap, why persevere through hard things to get to real joy?

For example:

I don’t mean to make McDonalds into a villain – McDonalds doesn’t ‘hate’ children with disabilities.

But there’s a reason McDonalds felt like this ad with this tagline using the word ‘joy’ would be effective – we like our joy cheap and easily accessible.

And that feeds a mindset that hard things, like the daily care of a child with a disability, really isn’t worth it.  Which leads to very bad things:  abortion; split marriages; lonely, bitter, hurt people.  In other words, things that Satan loves because they dishonor God, destroy people, destroy missions and destroy faith.

But we know that persevering most certainly IS worth it!  Jesus did not suffer for the sake of a short-term caffeine buzz but for eternal, ever-increasing measures of joy!

Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God. Hebrews 12:1-2

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November 11 is Veterans Day in the United States.  It is a day to honor and to remember.

As President Obama wrote in his proclamation of the day:

As a grateful Nation, we are humbled by the sacrifices rendered by our service members and their families out of the deepest sense of service and love of country. On Veterans Day, let us remember our solemn obligations to our veterans, and recommit to upholding the enduring principles that our country lives for, and that our fellow citizens have fought and died for.

Of the 26 million living veterans, more than 3 million live with a permanently disabling condition.  This includes 53,000 disabled veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan.

War is a terrible consequence of sin.  Sometimes evil leaders and evil movements must be confronted by military force, which means that people will be killed and disabled and displaced.  And God is sovereign over war, and the results of war.

Thankfully, someday war will no longer be an issue, because Jesus will assert his authority and power over those who war against him:

They will make war on the Lamb, and the Lamb will conquer them, for he is Lord of lords and King of kings, and those with him are called and chosen and faithful. Revelation 17:14

And after all that has been accomplished, God will establish the new heavens and the new earth for those he has chosen and called:

And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God.  He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.”

And he who was seated on the throne said, “Behold, I am making all things new.” Also he said, “Write this down, for these words are trustworthy and true.” And he said to me, “It is done! I am the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end. To the thirsty I will give from the spring of the water of life without payment.  The one who conquers will have this heritage, and I will be his God and he will be my son.” Revelation 21:3-7

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On Monday David Michael and I spoke to the first-year seminary students for Bethlehem Seminary.  Thank you to all who prayed for us!

I would say it went well.  We were received warmly, the men were attentive, and they had good questions.  They are clearly serious about their studies.  Who knows how the Holy Spirit might use those couple of hours for the sake of the kingdom!

And I walked away – again! – with a deep appreciation for what God has done through David Michael at Bethlehem.  He cares deeply about ALL the children at Bethlehem.  And he made it clear to the young men that this value really wasn’t optional for a church body  – all the children God has given as gifts should be considered as such!

I’m grateful God provides these encouragements to me.  They are deeply helpful to my soul and lead me to worship a God who provides such men in leadership at my church.

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