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Archive for May, 2010

Making Jesus the Lord of our Free Time

9781433507021(Modified excerpt from Holy Subversion: Allegiance to Christ in an Age of Rivals by Trevin Wax).

Free time is not a trivial matter. The activities we participate in during our moments of leisure shape our identity. In fact, the way we spend our free time reveals what we believe about God.

While leisure and rest are gifts from God, they can easily take the place of God in our lives. When leisure becomes our reason for living, it becomes a harsh task-master that blinds our vision so that we no longer see the danger in spending exorbitant amounts of money and time on nonstop entertainment. The problem is that we live in a world of constant entertainment. It may take form in the amount of time we spend watching TV, playing video games, or even taxiing our children around from one event to another. While independently and in moderation these things may not seem so bad, it’s created a culture of  busyness that is fragmenting relationships in communities and in families.

The Christian’s life is not grounded in leisure; it’s grounded in the cross. As we put leisure back in its proper place under the Lordship of Jesus, we will make different choices when it comes to our leisure activities. Here are three proactive steps that we can take as we start thinking about how we spend our leisure time:

1. Think seriously about the choices we make regarding our free time.
2. Purposefully structure our free time in a way that glorifies God.
3. Turn our focus away from the things that entertain us and to the people that God has entrusted to us.

(Excerpt modified from chapter 5 of Holy Subversion).

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May 4, 2010 | Posted in: Books,Pursuit of Holiness | Author: Crossway Staff @ 7:32 am | 0 Comments »

Introducing Failure from “Rescuing Ambition”

978143351491312Failure. It’s an equal opportunity affliction visiting rich and poor alike. Failure defies and levels and confounds even the best laid plans.

Failure is as old as history itself. Just flip through your Bible. Adam and Eve add the wrong fruit to their diet. Babel breaks ground on a skyscraper that fails the ultimate inspection. Abram sells out his wife to save his skin. Samson rejects the good girls and weds Delilah. God’s people demand and get a worldly king, who then tries to kill his replacement. David—the replacement—lusts for Bathsheba. Peter says, “Jesus who?” Paul and Barnabas split.

Like death, taxes, and really bad haircuts, failure finds us all.
I hear you: “What grand news, Dave! As long as we’re discussing my inevitable failure, why not just tell me I’m overweight and odoriferous?”

First, I’m not totally sure what odoriferous means, so I would never call you that.

Second, if God is truly sovereign, there must be a place for our failure in his plan. From Genesis to Revelation, the Bible declares God’s supreme control over events. If he can’t work through our screwups, he’s guilty of false advertising.

Like it or not, the sovereign God is Lord over our failures. In fact, he works through them. Failure isn’t simply God’s nightstick to whack us into submission. It’s an experience where we can discover God’s love, his irresistible grace, and the true potency of the gospel.

But to get to those discoveries, we must see failure as the place where some ambitions go to die so other things might come alive.

(Excerpt from Rescuing Ambition pp 138)

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May 3, 2010 | Posted in: Books,The Grace of God | Author: Crossway Staff @ 6:53 am | 0 Comments »