Monday, January 30, 2006

Piper Books for FREE!!!

You probably know by now that John Piper is my favorite author.
Many of his books are available on-line for free! You can read them here.
I would recommend starting with Desiring God, although Don't Waste Your Life is an easier (and shorter) read.
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I personally like to have a book in my hands as I read. It is easier on my eyes and I take notes and write comments in the margins and all over the page. Al Mohler writes in this post at the TFG blog that we need to "learn to have a conversation with the book, pen in hand." I agree -- it helps me learn!

Listening to the Word

If you like to LISTEN to the Bible, you can now listen to the English Standard Version online for free.

You can follow this link to go to the ESV search page to look up a portion of Scripture.
You need to set up your computer to play the audio by clicking on the options link at the top right and then choosing either "flash" or "MP3" as your audio format. (Flash worked better for me.) Once you save your preference you can search a passage and a "listen" link will appear next to the chapter title. Click that and wait a few seconds and the reading will commence.

This is helpful to me as I have returned to trying to regularly and purposefully memorize Scripture. Hearing Max McLean read the passage seems to help me -- but not as much as me reading it myself out loud over and over :-)

Also, I received my Scripture memory "Fighter Verses" from Desiring God today and I am looking forward to trying something fresh. During college I started writing verses on index cards -- and since then I have changed the version of the Bible that I read and NOT been faithful to review and add verses regularly over the years. I am excited about spending time each day purposefully memorizing Scripture -- I hope you are joining me!

If you are intereseted in the plan I am using, stop by the office sometime (call first, in case I'm "out") and I'll show you my Fighter Verses pack so you'll know what you are getting into before you fork out $12.00 for the verse pack. You may decide that you just want to get the list of verses (which you can find here) and write them on your own index cards (which is not a bad idea).

Saturday, January 21, 2006

Memorizing Scripture to Fight Temptation

On Sunday the sermon is from Matthew 4 on the temptation of Jesus. We are going to see that Christ's tool in fighting off temptation was Scripture. We are going to see that for us to fight temptation successfully we need to find ourselves treasuring Christ and loving the Word of God.
In light of that, I want to encourage you to start memorizing the Word of God.
Here are some tools that are available for you:
  • The Navigator's Topical Memory System may be the most widely used plan.
  • John Piper has a great sermon on why Scripture memory is important.
  • Piper's Fighter Verse Memorization Plan is a great tool that you can buy for you or your children.
  • Sovereign Grace Ministries has a plan that is useful for kids from age 2 through adults.
  • Bible.org has a list of verses on different topics that would be great to memorize.
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Psalm 119:9-16 (ESV)
How can a young man keep his way pure? By guarding it according to your word. With my whole heart I seek you; let me not wander from your commandments! I have stored up your word in my heart, that I might not sin against you. Blessed are you, O LORD; teach me your statutes! With my lips I declare all the rules of your mouth. In the way of your testimonies I delight as much as in all riches. I will meditate on your precepts and fix my eyes on your ways. I will delight in your statutes; I will not forget your word.

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

The Unchanging Gospel

This morning in our 6:15 men's study we discussed the fact that God never changes. At the 11:00 study we are studying Paul's Letter to the Galatians. As Paul writes in this letter about the one true gospel, I started thinking about how the unchanging nature of God is revealed in the unchanging message of the gospel! The gospel is good news, but it is not new news. God has been faithful to preserve the good news that He provides salvation throughout the earth's history -- and it remains good news today. The previous post contains a quote from Martin Luther from his Commentary on Galatians. This commentary was first published almost 500 years ago in 1535, yet it still has an impact on Christians around the world today. Why? Because Luther faithfully and clearly explains the gospel of Jesus Christ -- and that never becomes irrelevant. I highly recommend that you read old books. They remind us of the fact that the truth never changes.

Good News from Martin Luther

Martin Luther from his Commentary on Galatians:
Although I am a sinner by the law and under condemnation of the law, yet I despair not, yet I die not, because Christ lives, who is both my righteousness and my everlasting life. In that righteousness and life I have no sin, no fear, no sting of conscience, no care of death. I am indeed a sinner as touching this present life, and the righteousness thereof, as a child of Adam. But I have another righteousness and life, above this life, which is Christ the Son of God, who knows no sin, no death, but is righteousness and life eternal; by whom this my body, being dead and brought to dust, shall be raised up again, and delivered from the bondage of the law and sin, and shall be sanctified together with my spirit.
THAT gets to the heart of the gospel! Only in grasping the Gospel with all our being do we find true freedom to be what God has made us to be. Only in treasuring Christ above all things do we find true freedom from the fear of death and hope for our broken lives. The gospel is good news!

Monday, January 09, 2006

Meditating on Psalm 2

John Piper's "Fresh Words" this week is a meditation on one of my favorite passages. Psalm 2:11-12 says:
Serve the Lord with fear, and rejoice with trembling.
Kiss the Son, lest he be angry, and you perish in the way,
for his wrath is quickly kindled.
Blessed are all who take refuge in him.
Piper says:
Outside of God’s care there is only wrath. But there is a refuge from the wrath of God, namely, God. The safest place from the wrath of God—the only safe place—is God. Come to God. Take refuge in God. Hide in the shadow of his wings. This is where we live and serve with joyful trembling.

You can read the entire meditation HERE. You can also click a link on the top right corner of that page to have his weekly article e-mailed to you!

Also, pray for John Piper. He found out this week that he has prostate cancer. He wrote a very enlightening letter to his church that gives great insight on how to deal with personal tragedy. You can read the letter HERE.

Friday, January 06, 2006

We Should Pray For Them Too


I first saw this photo on The Officer's Club through conservative columnist Michelle Malkin. Yes, it is a picture of Airmen and Soldiers taking a moment to pray for each other's safety before heading out for another day of convoy duty in Iraq.
Note: Links provided on this page does not mean that I or WPC endorse all of the content of those pages.

Thursday, January 05, 2006

A Great Answer To What Is, Sadly, A Common Question...

Philip Ryken, the pastor of Tenth Presbyterian in Philadelphia, writing over at Reformation 21, answers the question, "What, in hell, has God ever done for us?":
Like many Americans, I have been watching with keen interest as the tragic events have unfolded at the Sago mine in West Virginia. Miner family member John Casto has been widely reported as saying that after the first report (12 miners were alive), people at Sago Baptist Church "were praising God," but after the second report (12 miners were dead), "they were cursing." As I heard these words, I couldn't help but think of Job, who had praise to give both when God gave and when God took away (Job 1:21).

One television report was more explicit about the cursing. Apparently, when the worst of all news had come, the pastor of the church told people to keep looking to God. But one man shouted, "What in hell has God ever done for us?"

The question is well worth pondering: What, in hell, has God ever done for us?

The answer, of course, is that in Christ, God himself has suffered the hellish agonies of the cross. We believe that Jesus descended into hell. That is to say, we believe that on the cross Jesus suffered the full fury of divine wrath and the utter despair of being separated from his Father's love -- the very essence of hell.

What, in hell, has God ever done for us? He has suffered the full penalty that our sins deserve. And now, having been to hell and back for us, Jesus has the empathy of grace to give every grieving, anguished, and enraged person who has lost what they love in life. There are some people in West Virginia who know this, and some who don't, and we should keep them all in our prayers.

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

An Old Scottish Preacher Says...

As I was working on the sermon for this week, I came across the following quote from Horatius Bonar:
"If we would be holy, we must get to the cross, and dwell there."
This is our only hope! We must run to the cross if we are to have any hope of personal holiness. I am studying the book of Galatians with some guys on Wednesday morning and we talked about this truth today. There is no hope to be found in trying to please God apart from the work of Christ on the cross! May we all make our dwelling at the cross!
The quote above is from chapter 3 of God's Way of Holiness.

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

Read Through The Bible This Year

I hope that everyone is having a great and happy New Year!
I am hoping to read through the entire Bible this year and thought some of you might want to join me. I know that you are already 2 days behind, but 7 chapters is not too much to catch up – and Genesis is pretty easy reading!
There are a few different plans available to help you read through the Bible in a year. I am following this plan. I get an email every morning letting me know what passage to read for the day and a link to a webpage where I can read the passage on-line. (You can sign up for the daily email at the bottom of that page.)
If you want a plan that you can print out and carry with you -- there are three different plans available from NavPress -- you can find them here.
FYI: Please note that the plan I am using this year follows a chronological path rather than a chapter-by-chapter sequence.