Skip to main content

Home/ PRTS Ministry/ Group items tagged and

Rss Feed Group items tagged

David Murray

Eternal Perspectives (Randy Alcorn's blog): Counting the Cost of Sexual Immorality - 0 views

  • Grieving my Lord; displeasing the One whose opinion most matters.Dragging into the mud Christ's sacred reputation.Loss of reward and commendation from God.Having to one day look Jesus in the face at the judgment seat and give an account of why I did it. Forcing God to discipline me in various ways. Following in the footsteps of men I know of whose immorality forfeited their ministry and caused me to shudder. List of these names: Suffering of innocent people around me who would get hit by my shrapnel (a la Achan).Untold hurt to Nanci, my best friend and loyal wife. Loss of Nanci's respect and trust.Hurt to and loss of credibility with my beloved daughters, Karina and Angela. ("Why listen to a man who betrayed Mom and us?")If my blindness should continue or my family be unable to forgive, I could lose my wife and my children forever.Shame to my family. (The cruel comments of others who would invariably find out.) Shame to my church family.Shame and hurt to my fellow pastors and elders. List of names: Shame and hurt to my friends, and especially those I've led to Christ and discipled. List of names: Guilt awfully hard to shake—even though God would forgive me, would I forgive myself?Plaguing memories and flashbacks that could taint future intimacy with my wife. Disqualifying myself after having preached to others. Surrender of the things I am called to and love to do—teach and preach and write and minister to others. Forfeiting forever certain opportunities to serve God. Years of training and experience in ministry wasted for a long period of time, maybe permanently. Being haunted by my sin as I look in the eyes of others, and having it all dredged up again wherever I go and whatever I do. Undermining the hard work and prayers of others by saying to our community "this is a hypocrite—who can take seriously anything he and his church have said and done?"Laughter, rejoicing and blasphemous smugness by those who disrespect God and the church (2 Samuel 12:14). Bringing great pleasure to Satan, the Enemy of God. Heaping judgment and endless problems on the person I would have committed adultery with. Possible diseases (pain, constant reminder to me and my wife, possible infection of Nanci, or in the case of AIDS, even causing her death, as well as mine.) Possible pregnancy, with its personal and financial implications. Loss of self-respect, discrediting my own name, and invoking shame and lifelong embarrassment upon myself.
  •  
    Counting the cost of sexual immorality
Maarten Kuivenhoven

Those Toxic Non-Attenders - 9Marks - 1 views

  • THE TOXIC EFFECTS OF NON-ATTENDERS1. They Make Evangelism Harder
  • 2. They Confuse New Believers
  • 3. They Discourage Regular Attenders
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • 4. They Worry Their Leaders
  • everyone who bears the name of Christ, as affirmed by your church, yet who willingly chooses to live their lives apart from the covenanted community of believers is practicing identity theft. They've taken Christ's name, but they don't honestly identify with his body, the local church.
  • Non-attenders are not only reverse-witnesses, they're reverse models. They disregard and disobey countless passages of Scripture and fail to image God's character in even the most basic ways, even though they claim to be his adopted children.
  • Second, non-attenders confuse new believers. New believers are often a mess. Everything they thought was up is down, and everything they thought was down is up. There is great confusion in the first weeks and months and even years of a new believer's life. They need to be taught well.
  • Regular attenders sacrifice to keep their covenant with their local church. They give their money and their time to meet the needs of other members of the body, which is not easy to say the least. Non-attenders don't do these things, at least not with any regularity. So when a church allows non-attenders to remain members, they effectively gut the meaning of membership, which hurts and discourages the faithful.
  • Hebrews 13:17 says, "Obey your leaders and submit to their authority. They keep watch over you as men who must give an account." In light of this verse, a faithful pastor or elder should feel responsible for the spiritual state of every member of his flock. Like a father worried about his son who hasn't yet come home late at night, a good shepherd doesn't rest until all his sheep are accounted for. Non-attenders makes this task nearly impossible.  
  • NOT ALL NON-ATTENDERS ARE ALIKE
  • Those who live in the area and are unable to attend: age or health prevent them. Such elderly or physically suffering members should be treated with special care. This article isn't about them. Those who live (temporarily) outside the area and are unable to attend: military or business assignments prevent them. Such (temporary) non-attenders should also be treated with special care since their travel for work places unique burdens on them and their family. This article isn't about them.  Those who live outside the area and choose to keep their membership with your local church: distance prevents them. Such non-attenders should be encouraged to join a local church they can attend. This article is about them. Those who live in the area and sporadically, infrequently attend: nothing really prevents them except their own choice. This article is especially about them.
Maarten Kuivenhoven

Why I Chose to Preach on Job - Reformation21 - 1 views

  • I recall with a sense of responsibility a comment one of those above mentioned mentors and models of ministry made to the effect that as preachers our calling is not only to expound the text to our people but to model how to read and understand the text for our people. One goal of my ministry, God helping me, is to try to equip our little congregation to handle the Bible well for themselves.
  • It was an experience that reinforced a growing conviction that unless pastors visit their people and know them, their ability to pastor them well from the pulpit will be greatly impaired.
  • My second reason for selecting Job was more directly pastoral. In the course of pastoral visitation and counseling I became increasingly aware of the numbers of people in the congregation who were hurting, confused, depressed, wondering where God was in their trials.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • And that takes me to another reason for preaching on Job and that is its polemic and apologetic value. We minister in a context where Christians are bombarded with books and resources offering them their best life now. It can therefore be a deeply disillusioning experience to discover that the program for health and wealth and happiness we have bought into was void of real resources to deliver on its promises.
  • And finally we turned to the book of Job because, when read in canonical context, it is impossible not to find lines of connection with the central story of scripture focused on Jesus Christ. In short, Job is a gospel book.
  • If there was a single lesson preaching Job has reinforced for me it would be that pastoral care informs the pulpit, and when it does the pulpit in turn accomplishes effective pastoral care.
David Murray

Lloyd-Jones on Seriousness in the Pulpit - The Gospel Coalition Blog - 0 views

  • The preacher must be a serious man; he must never give the impression that preaching is something light or superficial or trivial….What is happing [in the act of preaching] is that he is speaking to them from God, he is speaking to them about God, he is speaking about their condition, the state of their souls. He is telling them that they are, by nature, under the wrath of God–”the children of wrath even as others”–that the character of the life they’re living is offensive to God and under the judgment of God, and warning them of the dread eternal possibility that lies ahead of them. In any case the preacher, of all men, should realize the fleeting nature of life in this world. The men of the world are so immersed in its business and affairs, its pleasures and all is vain show, that the one thing they never stop to consider is the fleeting nature of life. All this means that the preacher should create and convey the impression of the seriousness of what is happening the moment he even appears in the pulpit. You remember the famous lines of Richard Baxter: “I preached as never sure to preach again, and as a dying man to dying men.”…You remember what was said of the saintly Robert Murray McCheyne of Scotland in the last century. It is said that when he appeared in the pulpit, even before he had uttered a single word, people would begin to weep silently. Why? Because of this very element of seriousness. The very sight of the man gave the impression that he had come from the presence of God and that he was to deliver a message from God to them. That is what had such an effect upon the people even before he had opened his mouth. We forget this at our peril, and at great cost to our listeners.
  •  
    Humor in the Ministry
anonymous

Too Few Children in the Pew « Creed:or:Chaos - 0 views

  • I have a huge problem with children (not just mine) leaving the collective assembly of the saints. Now the woman and most churches certainly have good intentions—that I certainly do not deny—but this relatively new phenomenon of segregating the church population during the general proclamation of law and gospel is not the biblical or historical standard.
  • One could go one step further and argue that the disjunction of the Old and New Testaments and the undo emphasis on the New Testament might be one cause of this age-based segregation. As far as I can see, the entire Bible advocates that all of the believers, both young and old, should gather together for general worship: to pray, partake of the sacraments, and to hear the gospel.
David Murray

Was Adam a Real Historical Individual? « Analogical Thoughts - 0 views

  • 1. On the face of it, the basic literary genre of Genesis 1-4 is that of historical narrative (as opposed to, e.g., poetry, legal code, or apocalypse).
  • 2. The first five verses of Genesis 5 not only describe events in Adam’s life, they attaches specific numerical dates to those events.
  • 3. The author of Genesis presents the book as a seamless historical account.
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • 4. Adam is named in the genealogy in 1 Chronicles 1.
  • 5. The interpretation of Hosea 6:7 is disputed, but a good case can be offered that taking ‘Adam’ as a reference to the first human being, rather than as a place-name or as ‘mankind’, makes best sense in the context.
  • 6. The genealogy of Jesus Christ given in Luke 3:23-38 traces all the way back to Adam.
  • 7. In Matthew 19:3-9, in answer to a question about divorce, Jesus refers the Pharisees back to the account of the creation of Adam and Eve in Genesis 1-2.
  • 8. In Romans 5:12-21, Paul draws his famous parallel between Adam and Jesus.
  • 9. In the same passage, Paul states that “death reigned from Adam to Moses” (verse 14). Paul clearly means to refer to a specific period in human history;
  • 10. Paul’s parallel between Adam and Christ reappears in 1 Corinthians 15:21-22 (also verse 45).
  • 11. In 1 Timothy 2:12-14, Paul refers to specific details about the creation and fall of Adam and Eve to support his instructions about women teaching in the church.
  • 12. Jude 14 refers to “Enoch, the seventh from Adam”; it’s a reasonable presumption that the author of Jude viewed both Enoch and Adam as historical individuals.
  •  
    The Historical Adam
Timothy Bergsma

1. Accountability: The Mark of a Wise and Protected Leader - 0 views

  • Teach people to live out the gospel in all of their relationships
  • Teach people to shun gossip and slander, especially against leaders
  • Repeatedly commend the habit of making "charitable judgments.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Encourage people to distinguish between style and substance
  • Train all of your people, and especially your leaders, how to respond to conflict biblically
  •  
    Accountability:The Mark of a Wise and Protected Leader
  •  
    This is the 1st of 2 articles I found that address some comments in our Moodle Question for this week (Sept. 19/09) on "Maintaining Moral Purity" 1. Accountability 2. Approachability
David Murray

How Could God Command Genocide in the Old Testament? - Justin Taylor - 0 views

  • 1. As the maker of all things and the ruler of all people, God has absolute rights of ownership over all people and places
  • 2. God is not only the ultimate maker, ruler, and owner, but he is just and righteous in all that he does.
  • 3. All of us deserve God’s justice; none of us deserve God’s mercy.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • 4. The Canaanites were enemies of God who deserved to be punished.
  • 5. God’s actions were not an example of ethnic cleansing.
  • 6. Why was it necessary to remove the Canaanites from the land?
  • 7. The destruction of the Canaanites is a picture of the final judgment.
  •  
    Theodicy and the Canaanites
David Murray

http://www.rcpc.com/blog/view.jsp?Blog_param=44 - 0 views

  • John Frame's 'tri-perspectivalism' helps me understand Willow. The Willow Creek style churches have a 'kingly' emphasis on leadership, strategic thinking, and wise administration. The danger there is that the mechanical obscures how organic and spontaneous church life can be. The Reformed churches have a 'prophetic' emphasis on preaching, teaching, and doctrine. The danger there is that we can have a naïve and unBiblical view that, if we just expound the Word faithfully, everything else in the church -- leader development, community building, stewardship of resources, unified vision -- will just happen by themselves. The emerging churches have a 'priestly' emphasis on community, liturgy and sacraments, service and justice. The danger there is to view 'community' as the magic bullet in the same way Reformed people view preaching
  •  
    Leadership
David Murray

On Grasshoppers and Email : What's Best Next - 1 views

  • Email contains a paradox, like these grasshoppers: Going faster doesn’t mean you’ll get less. In fact, it might mean that you’ll get even more, because email responds to your presence, just like the grasshoppers.
  • What you need to do is both become more efficient at processing email and at the same time decrease the number of times that you check email each day.
  • For if you choose to be almost immediately responsive with email, then you will get less long-term and important non-email stuff done.
  •  
    Email and Time Management
anonymous

Of the eternal purpose of grace. - 0 views

  • they speak of God after the manner of men, as if he were reduced to some straits and difficulties, by the cross demands of his several attributes.
    • anonymous
       
      The caricature of the Son cajoling an unwilling Father, in all its absurdity is not new!
  • What they owe me I require all at thy hands.
  • The earthy man had all the sons of men born into the world included in him, and is so called, in conformity unto them, the "first man": 12 the second Man, Christ, is called the "Lord from heaven," who had all the elect included in him, who are said to be the "first born," and to have their "names written in heaven," (Heb 12:23), and therefore are appositely called "heavenly men"; so that these two, in God's account, stood for all the rest.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • And thus have I endeavoured to show you, how we are to conceive of God's eternal purpose in sending of Jesus Christ to help and deliver fallen mankind.
David Murray

Core Convictions Behind Theological Training - 0 views

  • Second, it’s a challenge because Scripture doesn’t speak specifically to every facet of church life and ministry. It requires an ever-deepening understanding of the Bible, a grasp of its details and overarching unity, a sensitivity to the “pattern” (2 Timothy 1:13) and proportionality of its truth. More than anything, it requires a firm grasp of the gospel and its entailments for the Christian life individually, and for the church’s life corporately.
    • David Murray
       
      Application to counseling?
  • For example, with the exception of the gift of teaching, the biblical requirements for eldership (e.g., 1 Timothy 3 & Titus 1) all speak to a pastor’s character; there’s nothing about personality types, educational levels, or social standing. Transcending all other considerations, a pastor is to be an illustration of the transforming effects of the gospel he proclaims, and an example of sound Christian living to those he serves.
  •  
    Training for the Ministry
David Murray

Journalism and Objectivity: Interview with Marvin Olasky (3) : Kingdom People - 0 views

  • God has a particular point of view on things. You can see his view as you read the Bible. Some issues are clearer than others. The God’s-Eye point of view is the only objective point of view out there, because only God has the knowledge that allows him to know what the world is made of and what we’re made of, etc. The only objectivity is biblical objectivity. Our goal as Christian reporters is to try to pick that up as best we can. Again, we are fallen; we are sinners; we are certainly limited in our understanding. But we do have clarity on a variety of issues. The metaphor that I developed (which we still use at World) is white water rafting. In white water rafting, there are six classes of rapids. Class 1: very easy gently down the stream. Class 6: waterfalls. Similarly, when we look at certain issues, some are Class 1 issues, where the Bible is very clear. Example? You shall not murder. On a Class 6 issue, the Bible is very unclear. Example? What should we do about a particular treaty or a certain foreign policy issue? On Class 1 issues, the biblical teaching is explicit. On Class 2 issues, the Bible is implicit. An example of implicit teaching would be the value of Christian education. When you understand the different types of issues, you can be very direct in your reporting. Everyone is directed by some philosophy or some worldview. When you are directed by a biblical worldview on those issues spoken to explicitly in the Scriptures, you can report clearly. On Class 5 and 6 issues, the lack of biblical clarity means you should move more towards balancing the different viewpoints. In between those extremes, there are places where the Bible gives you direction. Take, for example, our duty to fight poverty. The Bible lays out some very clear guidelines. The particular way we fight poverty may not always be that clear, but I think you can always arrive at some conclusions from the Bible. I would label that as a Class 3 issue. The way you fight poverty may not be immediately apparent. Discernment is key.
  •  
    Christian journalism and the Sufficiency of Scripture.
David Murray

Unleashing the Word :: books, reading, reviews, scripture, worship :: A Reformed, Chris... - 0 views

  • If I had read this book a few years ago, it would have rocked my world, I think. It is only since I began attending Grace Fellowship Church that I’ve come to see the value of the public reading of Scripture not as a simple means to an end—a way to get us from the music to the sermon—but as an end in itself. In this church I’ve come to see the reading of Scripture as a core part of the teaching ministry of the church. The Word preaches; the Word is the
  • sermon before the sermon. And if this is true, then we ought to invest effort in reading it well. This can only be the case where the reading of Scripture is given prominence within the worship service and where the person reading is talented and passionate about what he is doing.
  • This is what he wants to see: talented individuals who make it their ministry in the church to participate in the worship service by reading Scripture. His tips range from how stand before a crowd and deliver an effective reading of Scripture to how to prepare a passage to how to breath when nervous to everything in between. He then provides some teaching on how to teach others to participate in this ministry before concluding with some more practical guidance on preparation, delivery and so on. It is in all ways a practical book. I love his vision here and would rejoice to see churches adopting it.
anonymous

Helm's Deep: Two Lessons from John Owen: I - The Trinity - 0 views

  • He sets himself to walk a tight-rope by upholding the place of theological reasoningwhile denying the authority of human reason in religion. But the tide of anti-Puritanism that flowed as the result of the combined pull of Quakerism, Socinianism (or Unitarianism) and of Cambridge Platonism, was irresistible.
  • Some have said that in the present-day the consciousness of the doctrine of the Trinity is not as great as it should be in evangelical churches; that there is a hesitancy over it in our worship, and in our theologising. It is marginalised, or at least it is not in the front of our minds. If so, this may be because it is thought that the Trinitarian character of God is something of an appendage. God is one, yes, and that is clear and straightforward to grasp, but he is also three persons, and that is more complex.
  • We may even think that the very formulation of the doctrine is a sullying of the pure word of God by the intrusion of ‘Greek thought’.
David Murray

William Ames on Singing Imprecatory Psalms | Meet The Puritans - 0 views

  • 8. A. 1. We may upon occasion of those imprecations meditate with fear and trembling, on the terrible judgments of God against the sins of impenitent persons. 9. 2. We may thereupon profit in patience and consolation, against the temptations which are wont to [habitually] arise from the prosperity of the wicked, and affliction of the godly. 10. 3. We may also pray to God that he would hasten his revenge (not against our private enemies but) against the wicked and incurable enemies of his Church.
  •  
    Imprecatory Psalms
David Murray

How to Set Up Your Desk: Basic Principles : What's Best Next - 0 views

  • 1. Your desk should be like a cockpit
  • 2. Everything at your desk falls into just a few categories
  • 3. The desk is for doing work, not storing work or reminding you of work
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • 4. All of the input that comes your way is either trash, information, or action
  • 5. Create work centers
  • 5. Use P-L-A-C-E to organize things intelligently
  • . Have interchangeable systems at home and work
  • 7. Have a mobile component
  • P urge. Get rid of what is unnecessary, especially pens that don’t work. L ike with like. This means that you group like things together, just like you learned in high school English. This is really the central principle to organizing anything. A ccess. When you have your groupings determined, you place them according to your access needs. This is why, for example, extra supplies go off in a supply closet or other out of the way place, rather than in your drawers. You don’t want stuff you don’t have to access as much getting in your way when accessing stuff you do need a lot. C ontain. Don’t just let stuff run loose. Use drawer dividers and other types of containers when relevant. E valuate. When you are done, step back and contemplate how you like it and make sure it works well for you. Make any adjustments.
  •  
    How to set up your desk (2)
David Murray

Chuck Swindoll: 10 Leadership Lessons Learned in 50 Years of Leadership - Justin Taylor - 0 views

  • It’s lonely to lead. Leadership involves tough decisions. The tougher the decision, the lonelier it is. It’s dangerous to succeed. I’m most concerned for those who aren’t even 30 and are very gifted and successful. Sometimes God uses someone right out of youth, but usually he uses leaders who have been crushed. It’s hardest at home. No one ever told me this in Seminary. It’s essential to be real. If there’s one realm where phoniness is common, it’s among leaders. Stay real. It’s painful to obey. The Lord will direct you to do some things that won’t be your choice. Invariably you will give up what you want to do for the cross. Brokenness and failure are necessary. Attitude is more important than actions. Your family may not have told you: some of you are hard to be around. A bad attitude overshadows good actions. Integrity eclipses image. Today we highlight image. But it’s what you’re doing behind the scenes. God’s way is better than my way. Christlikeness begins and ends with humility.
  •  
    Leadership
David Murray

Counterfeit Gods - The Personal Story - The Gospel Coalition Blog - 1 views

  • I was using people in order to forge my own self-appreciation. I was looking to my sacrificial ministry to give me the sense of “righteousness before God” that should only come from Jesus Christ. People make idols out of money, power, accomplishment, or moral excellence. They look to these things to “save them” — to give them the sense of purity, value, and acceptability that only Jesus can give. In my case, I was using ministry (and my own people) in this way.
  •  
    The Ministry and Idolatry
Timothy Bergsma

2. Approachability: The Passport to Real Ministry and Leadership - 0 views

  • The Characteristics of an Approachable Leader
  • Maintain a “gentle authority slope.”
  • Fight pride and cultivate true humility
  • ...11 more annotations...
  • Cultivate a Shepherd’s Heart.
  • Guard against institutional dynamics that can undermine approachability
  • See God’s people as he does.
  • Send convincing signals that you have time for people
  • Be transparent.
  • Pick up on hints.
  • See the good in others (even if it seems outweighed by the bad).
  • Listen deeply before jumping to problem-solving.
  • Be quick to confess sins, whether large or small.
  • Be slow to confront sin in others
  • Make yourself truly accountable to others
  •  
    article by Ken Sande, Peacemaker Ministries
  •  
    Approachability: The Passport to Real Ministry and Leadership
  •  
    This is the 2nd of 2 articles that address some of the comment in our Moodle Question for this week (Sept. 18/09), on "Maintaining Moral Purity" 1. Accountability 2. Approachability
1 - 20 of 41 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page