Mar
0

John Piper on the wasted life

Here is an extract from John Piper’s excellent book “Don’t Waste Your Life”

“AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY: HOW NOT TO FINISH YOUR ONE LIFE
I will tell you what a tragedy is. I will show you how to waste your life. Consider a story from the February 1998 edition of Reader’s Digest, which tells about a couple who “took early retirement from their jobs in the Northeast five years ago when he was 59 and she was 51. Now they live in Punta Gorda, Florida, where they cruise on their 30 foot trawler, play softball and collect shells.” At first, when I read it I thought it might be a joke. A spoof on the American Dream. But it wasn’t. Tragically, this was the dream: Come to the end of your life—your one and only precious, God-given life—and let the last great work of your life, before you give an account to your Creator, be this: playing softball and collecting shells. Picture them before Christ at the great day of judgment: “Look, Lord. See my shells.” That is a tragedy. And people today are spending billions of dollars to persuade you to embrace that tragic dream. Over against that, I put my protest: Don’t buy it. Don’t waste your life.”

I love the provocative nature of this challenge! It would be easy to justify the decisions of the couple in Piper’s story, but don’t be too quick to. Allow the provocation and challenge to sift your heart motives. Don’t Waste Your Life!

Mar
0

Vision Planning

Today I spent the afternoon doing some vision and planning for the future of Nene Family Church

Feb
0

The Metanarrative of the Bible

Have you ever tried to articulate the metanarrative or big story of the Bible? Last night at SUMO, the emerging leaders group that I’m running at Nene Family Church, we did just that. I asked the guys to try and articulate in a few sentences what the Bible was all about.

Here’s my attempt at summing up the metanarrative of the Bible:

The overall metanarrative of the Bible is of a missionary God, so committed to the rescue of sinful and hostile enemies that He was willing to incarnate that passion in human flesh and have cruel nails driven through His hands and a spear driven into His side to create a beachhead for his grace and salvation to be unleashed in enemy territory. Ephesians 2 is a classic example; hostile but enslaved enemies being released by God’s sovereign rescuing activity.

Following Christ’s resurrection and ascension; speaking as ‘the’ great missionary or pioneer to those who would follow after him in his footsteps, He said, “as the father has sent me, even so I am sending you” (John 20:21, ESV). Suddenly this metanarrative takes on a new surge of energy as the Spirit of mission is poured out upon the church so that we get caught up in Christ’s great rescue mission!

Feb
0

What is Church?

This is a great talk by Mark Driscoll, from Mars Hill Church (Seattle)

What is the Church by Mark Driscoll from Vintage21 Church on Vimeo.

Feb
Feb
0

World Christians

In recent posts I’ve written about Nene Family Church becoming a gateway to the nations and God’s passion for his own rainbow-like, multi-coloured family, made up of people from every nation, tribe and tongue. Today I read the following excellent quotation from D.A. Carson…

What we need, then, are world Christians—not simply American Christians or British Christians. By “world Christians”, I am referring to Christians, genuine believers in the Lord Jesus Christ, of whom the following things are true:

  • Their allegiance to Jesus Christ and his kingdom is self-consciously set above all national, cultural, linguistic, and racial allegiances.
  • Their commitment to the church, Jesus’ messianic community, is to the church everywhere, wherever the church is truly manifest, and not only to its manifestation on home turf.
  • They see themselves first and foremost as citizens of the heavenly kingdom and therefore consider all others citizenships as secondary matter.
  • As a result, they are single-minded and sacrificial when it comes to the paramount mandate to evangelize and make disciples.

The church, of course, is the only institution with eternal significance. If anyone ought to transcend the limitations of merely temporal allegiances, then those who constitute the church should.

The Cross and Christian Ministry(Pg. 116-117)

Feb
0

Connectors Keep It Simple By John C. Maxwell

If you have not read any John C. Maxwell, then this is a great little post that I found on his website…

William Henry Harrison gave the longest inaugural address of any U.S. President, taking two hours to plod through a whopping 8,445-word speech. Even though the speech was delivered outdoors on a frigid and rainy day, the President stubbornly refused to wear an overcoat or hat. As a result, he caught a cold that developed into pneumonia, and he died a month later. The leadership lesson: it pays to simplify.

Two Myths about Simplicity

Myth #1 Simplicity Lacks Depth

A few years ago, I was being interviewed on a television talk show. “John,” the host said, “I’ve read several of your books, and they are all so simple.” His mocking tone made it clear to the audience and to me that the comment was not intended as a compliment.

My response was direct: “That’s true. The principles in my books are simple to understand, but they are not always simple to apply.” The audience applauded, and the talk show host conceded that what I said was true.

We often associate simplicity with a lack of depth or shortage of intelligence. Conversely, we ascribe intelligence to people who communicate using big words or hard-to-grasp concepts. Somehow, we assume that anyone speaking in a dense, academic style must be smart.

The issues we face in life can be complex, with all sorts of intricacies. However, as leaders and communicators, our job is to bring clarity to a subject, reducing rather than adding to its complexity. The measure of a great teacher isn’t what he knows; it’s what his students know. Simplicity is a skill, and it’s a necessary one if you want to connect with people when you communicate.

Myth #2 Simplicity Is Easy

When we encounter something simple, we assume it has been hastily thrown together or not fully thought out. To us, simplicity means taking shortcuts and denying the complex reality of life. However, in a society flooded with information, simplicity has never been more difficult to achieve. Nor has it ever been as important.

Perhaps nobody understands simplicity better than Apple, Inc. The company put its computers back on the map by touting their user-friendly interfaces. Then, Apple leapfrogged the competition by pioneering devices that simplified the way we access, store, and share information.

Despite his success in bringing about simplicity, Apple CEO Steve Jobs attests to the difficulty of doing so.

If you read the Apple’s first brochure, the headline was “Simplicity is the Ultimate Sophistication.” What we meant by that was that when you first attack a problem it seems really simple because you don’t understand it. Then when you start to really understand it, you come up with these very complicated solutions because it’s really hairy. Most people stop there. But a few people keep burning the midnight oil and finally understand the underlying principles of the problem and come up with an elegantly simple solution for it. But very few people go the distance to get there.

A leader’s initial attempts to resolve a problem raise a host of questions that make the problem appear bigger than it did at first. However, as leaders persevere through the haze of complexity and wade through the maze of possible remedies, they often arrive at a simple solution. Once they have the solution, and can state it plainly, leaders are in position to connect with their customers.

Summary

It may seem counterintuitive, but if you want to take your communication to the next level, don’t try to dazzle people with your intellect or overpower them with information. Give them clarity and simplicity. People will relate to you, and they’ll want to invite you back to communicate with them again.

Also, don’t expect simplicity to come easily. At first, your attempts to find clarity may seem to backfire. Nevertheless, press on and maintain focus. Eventually, you’ll reduce your problems to a manageable size, and you’ll uncover simple principles that will aid your ability to connect with those you serve.

ABOUT

John C. Maxwell is an internationally respected leadership expert, speaker, and author who has sold more than 18 million books. Dr. Maxwell is the founder of EQUIP, a non-profit organization that has trained more than 5 million leaders in 126 countries worldwide. Each year he speaks to the leaders of diverse organizations, such as Fortune 500 companies, foreign governments, the National Football League, the United States Military Academy at West Point, and the United Nations. A New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Business Week best-selling author, Maxwell has written three books that have sold more than a million copies: The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership, Developing the Leader Within You, and The 21 Indispensable Qualities of a Leader. His blog can be read at www.JohnMaxwellOnLeadership.com.

Feb
0

Francis Schaeffer Week – Quote 7

…philosophy and religion deal with the same basic questions. Christians, and especially evangelical Christians, have tended to forget this. Philosophy and religion do not deal with different questions, though they give different answers and use different terms. The basic questions of both philosophy and religion (and I mean religion here in the wide sense, including Christianity) are the questions of Being (that is, what exists), of man and his dilemma (that is, morals), and of epistemology (that is, how man knows). Philosophy deals with these points, but so does religion, including evangelical, orthodox Christianity.

Francis A. Schaeffer, He Is There and He Is Not Silent, Ch. 1

Feb
0

Francis Schaeffer Week – Quote 6


We need to learn that when we begin to tamper with the scriptural concept of true moral guilt, whether it be psychological tampering, genetic tampering, theological tampering or any other kind of tampering, our view of what Jesus did will no longer be scriptural. Christ died for man who had true moral guilt because man had made a real and true choice.

Francis A. Schaeffer, Escape From Reason, Ch. 2

Feb
0

Francis Schaeffer Week – Quote 5

The Bible says that you are wonderful because you are made in the image of God, but that you are flawed because at a space-time point of history man fell. The reformers knew that man was separated from God because of manís revolt against God. But the reformers, and the people who following the Reformation built the culture of Northern Europe, knew that while man is morally guilty before the God who exists, man is not nothing. Modern man tends to think that he is nothing. The reformers knew they were the very opposite of nothing, because they knew they were made in the image of God. Even though they were fallen and, without the nonhumanistic solution of Christ and His substitutionary death, were separated from God and would go to Hell, this still did not mean that they were nothing.
Francis A. Schaeffer, Escape From Reason, Ch. 2