Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Don't Ruin Rest


"One of the sneakier pitfalls of an efficiency-based attitude to time is that we start to feel pressured to use our leisure time “productively”, too – an attitude which implies that enjoying leisure for its own sake, which you might have assumed was the whole point of leisure, is somehow not quite enough. And so we find ourselves, for example, travelling to unfamiliar places not for the sheer experience of travel, but in order to add to our mental storehouse of experiences, or to our Instagram feeds. We go walking or running to improve our health, not for the pleasure of movement; we approach the tasks of parenthood with a fixation on the successful future adults we hope to create."

"...Friedrich Nietzsche, in what reads like a foreshadowing of our present circumstances. “Haste is universal because everyone is in flight from himself.”"

Saturday, November 12, 2016

From the Gospel Transformation Bible on Psalm 55

"Recalling that God is King allows the believer to calm his emotions (v. 19 ). He is calmed by the realization that his Shepherd-King “gives ear” to his “voice” and protects his soul in the battle (vv. 16– 19 ; 78: 72 ). The believer’s faith is reawakened when he remembers that God will bring justice upon the treacherous ( 55: 23 ). A fresh vision of a benevolent and all-powerful King creates a stable and steadfast faith, inviting other anxious souls to “cast [their] burden” upon the Lord rather than be cast about on the waves of doubt or even be cast down into the “pit of destruction” (vv. 22– 23 ; 1 Pet. 5: 6– 7 ). Even now, Christ rules over all ( Phil. 2: 9 )."

Thursday, October 13, 2016

Waiting On God's Timing, Even With God's Vision

October 13th

Individual discouragement and personal enlargement

Moses went unto his brethren, and looked on their burdens. Exodus 2:11.

"Moses saw the oppression of his people and felt certain that he was the one to deliver them, and in the righteous indignation of his own spirit he started to right their wrongs. After the first strike for God and for the right, God allowed Moses to be driven into blank discouragement, He sent him into the desert to feed sheep for forty years. At the end of that time, God appeared and told Moses to go and bring forth His people, and Moses said—‘Who am I, that I should go?’ In the beginning Moses realized that he was the man to deliver the people, but he had to be trained and disciplined by God first. He was right in the individual aspect, but he was not the man for the work until he had learned communion with God.
We may have the vision of God and a very clear understanding of what God wants, and we start to do the thing; then comes something equivalent to the forty years in the wilderness, as if God had ignored the whole thing, and when we are thoroughly discouraged God comes back and revives the call, and we get the quaver in and say—‘Oh, who am I!’ We have to learn the first great stride of God—“I AM THAT I AM hath sent thee.” We have to learn that our individual effort for God is an impertinence; our individuality is to be rendered incandescent by a personal relationship to God (see Matthew 3:11). We fix on the individual aspect of things; we have the vision—‘This is what God wants me to do’; but we have not got into God’s stride. If you are going through a time of discouragement, there is a big personal enlargement ahead.”

https://ref.ly/o/utmost/449219 via the Logos Bible Android app.

Monday, October 03, 2016

On Ephesians 1.22,23: Jesus' Sovereignty




DORET: "By the church he means the whole community of the faithful. This he calls the body of Christ and the fullness of the Father. This body he has filled with all gifts. He lives in it and goes about in it,* as the voice of prophecy says. But this will be more strictly so in the future life....In the present life God is in all, since his nature is uncircumscribed; but he is not all in all,* since some are impious and some lawless. Yet he lives in those who fear him and who put hope in his mercy. In the next life at any rate, when mortality has ceased and immortality is conferred and sin has no place any longer, he will be all in all."
* Lev 26.11,12
* 1 Cor 15:28

from 'Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture', Vol 8.

Sunday, October 02, 2016

Key Thought. Summarizing A Great Book.

from "Waiting on God" by Andrew Murray.

"Dear Christian, begin to see that waiting is not one among a number of Christian virtues, to be thought of from time to time. But, it expresses that disposition that lies at the very root of the Christian life. It gives a higher value and a new power to our prayers and worship, to our faith and surrender, because it links us, in unalterable dependence, to God Himself. And, it gives us the unbroken enjoyment of the goodness of God: "The LORD is good unto them that wait for him.""