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Since I began working at Desiring God, I have participated in five conferences.  For the most part, my responsibilities are defined by working at a booth and talking to people about Desiring God.

Every conference I have met someone dealing with significant hardships, either personally or in their families: disability, disease, drug or alcohol abuse, death, persecution for beliefs at work or home.  This conference included a dad who lost his adult son to cancer and a grandma whose grandchild lives in a permanent vegetative state with multiple disabilities, among others.

I know I’m ‘out there’ on this issue of disability, but none of these people know that – it just comes up.  So I’m puzzling through why that happens and so far have come up with two possible things:

  1. Pastor John talks about suffering – a lot.  Suffering people will find much at Desiring God – books, sermons, conference messages – that help them see God as he truly is in the midst of their suffering: sovereign, strong, intentional, loving, capable.  It makes sense that such people would come to Desiring God conferences.
  2. God helps us, often through other people who are faithfully trusting in him.  Given how much God has helped us through, it makes sense that the Holy Spirit would guide some people to me to talk specifically about our situation and the faithfulness of God to us personally.  God has certainly guided me to such people in the past and I expect he will do so again when I need help in the future.

Now, of course, there were hundreds of other people at the conference in the midst of hard circumstances that I didn’t talk to.  Many of my colleagues, both staff and volunteers, also have stories of praying with people suffering under extraordinary burdens.  But I still find it interesting who God brought specifically to me.

Does God do that to you as well?  Do you find yourself in the most sensitive of conversations on the deepest of subjects in unusual, unexpected places?

And rather than being a hardship, I find myself grateful that God introduces me to such people.  God is good!

I love you, O Lord, my strength. The Lord is my rock and my fortress and my deliverer, my God, my rock, in whom I take refuge, my shield, and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold. Psalm 18:1-2

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More than 13 years ago I wrote an email to Pastor John in which I said I thought it would have been better if Jesus hadn’t healed the man born blind in John 9.  His response was used by the Holy Spirit to point me to Jesus, and I am very grateful to this day for that email.

So imagine my surprise, as I was wandering through the journal Disability Studies Quarterly, “the first journal in the field of disability studies,” and found this in an article by Jennifer L. Koosed, Ph.D. and Darla Schumm, Ph.D. entitled, “Out of the Darkness: Examining the Rhetoric of Blindness in the Gospel of John.” (more…)

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One of the reasons I’m praying for the Bethlehem College and Seminary is because they are filled with passionate faculty!  Please consider subscribing to their weekly prayer email so you can pray with them through the year.  Affections for God are important, and should not be assumed.  Here’s why:

I’m reading an old Journal of Biblical Literature article from 1970 on Mark 2 and the use of the term ‘son of man’ in the account of Jesus healing the paralytic.

It is very dry.

But that isn’t the problem because the subject is inherently interesting for me.

The problem is that the writer is completely lacking any affections for the scripture, God or Jesus. Or if he has some, those affections are so buried under his academic language I can’t find them!  And that leads to a bigger problem.

(more…)

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Did you know that October is National Disability Employment Awareness Month?  I didn’t either.

Here is the announcement.

Assistant Secretary Romano made a nice statement, including the following:

Through our collaborative efforts, let us end 2008 by fully embracing the principles of the New Freedom Initiative and providing all Americans with disabilities with a pathway to a better life.

Today the New York Times also reported a different kind of awareness, which may not be so good for unborn babies with down syndrome:

Blood Tests Ease Search for Down Syndrome

Testing technology “has outpaced society’s understanding of what life with Down syndrome is like,” said Mark Leach, the father of a 4-year-old girl with the condition. Mr. Leach is chairman of the informed-decision-making task force of the group Down Syndrome Affiliates in Action.

Lord, please protect us from our own foolishness – making much of people with disabilities on the one hand, and finding new ways to keep them from being born on the other.

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The accounting of Jesus healing the paralytic is told in three different places in the gospels, and is one of the thrilling examples of Jesus’ unique ability as God to forgive sins.  It has many dramatic elements – the friends’ determination to get to Jesus, the lowering down from the roof, the encounter with Jesus that first results in the man’s sins being forgiven and then Jesus giving him the ability to walk, the crowd being astonished and glorifying God.

But there is an interesting piece of information presented in all three accounts about the five men that is often overlooked:

Matthew 9:2 And behold, some people brought to him a paralytic, lying on a bed. And when Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, “Take heart, my son; your sins are forgiven.”

Mark 2:5 And when Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, “Son, your sins are forgiven.”

Luke 5:20 And when he (Jesus) saw their faith, he said, “Man, your sins are forgiven you.”

Do you see it?  In all three accounts, “Jesus saw their faith” and then the paralytic man’s sins are forgiven.  The five men have faith, and one man specifically receives forgiveness.  What does this corporate faith mean in terms of an individual’s faith and forgiveness of sin through Jesus Christ?

Matthew Henry’s Commentary on the Whole Bible is very helpful here (click here to read the entire commentary on Matt 9):

Now their faith was, 1. A strong faith; they firmly believed that Jesus Christ both could and would heal him; else they would not have brought the sick man to him so publicly, and through so much difficulty. 2. A humble faith; though the sick man was unable to stir a step, they would not ask Christ to make him a visit, but brought him to attend on Christ. It is fitter than we should wait on Christ, than he on us. 3. An active faith: in the belief of Christ’s power and goodness, they brought the sick man to him, lying on a bed, which could not be done without a deal of pains. Note, A strong faith regards no obstacles in pressing after Christ.

Strong, humble, active faith.  Sins are forgiven.  God is glorified.  But it was not their ability or determination that brought forgiveness and the physical healing of their friend. It had always been part of God’s plan that these men would have faith!  Foreknown, predestined, called, justified – and today, glorified!

Romans 8:29 For those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, in order that he might be the firstborn among many brothers. 30 And those whom he predestined he also called, and those whom he called he also justified, and those whom he justified he also glorified.

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