Archive for Affection

Spiritual Inventory

// February 16th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection, Doctrine, Life

inventory_largeThis is a great list of questions for taking a spiritual inventory of yourself or doing so in the context of leadership development in the church.

From JR Vassar:

I encourage you sit down with a journal and your bible as you walk through these questions:

  1. Do I love Jesus with a demonstrable love? Is there anything or anyone that I love more deeply than Jesus or pursue more intensely than Jesus?
  2. Do I look forward to spending time with Jesus in the Scriptures and in prayer? Do I miss out on other things to spend time with Him?
  3. Am I regularly discovering new things in the Word of God that impact my daily life?
  4. Do I sincerely desire and intend to obey God in every area of my life? Do I sincerely desire purity of heart, mind, and body?
  5. Do I sense the Holy Spirit’s presence in my life leading me and strengthening me? (If He were to leave my life, would I sense a great loss?)
  6. Do I sincerely confess my sins to God with a broken heart? When did I last weep over sin in my life?
  7. Is there anything in my life I am hiding from others that I am afraid will be exposed?
  8. Is there anything in my life right now that I know displeases God, but I am not willing to repent of?
  9. Do I spontaneously and whole-heartedly give thanks to God for saving me by His grace?
  10. Do I give my resources regularly and sacrificially to see God’s purposes for this world fulfilled?
  11. Is my life marked more by thanksgiving or by complaining and criticizing?
  12. Do I sincerely love others and seek their good as passionately as I seek my own? Am I as patient and forgiving toward others’ failures as I am toward my own?
  13. Do I show genuine humility toward others? When have I recently sacrificed my time and money for the good of others?
  14. Am I able to admit when I am wrong and able to say to others, “I am sorry, please forgive me.” Or, am I slow to admit failure and do I make excuses for my behavior?
  15. Have I forgiven others the wrongs done to me? Or, do I have bitterness toward others who have wronged me?
  16. Am I currently grieving the Holy Spirit with unloving attitudes and harmful actions toward others?
  17. Do I truly desire for my friends to know Jesus and honor him in their lives? Do I earnestly pray for His increased fame and renown in my city?

Joseph and Jesus

// February 12th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection

bible0028

My heart is moved when I read the story of Joseph and his brothers in Genesis 37-50. What a beautiful picture of Christ. Like Joseph’s brothers, we all have done wrong against our “Brother” Jesus. It was our sin that took him to the Cross, and held him there in agony. It was our jealousy of his status that caused us to rebel against him. And yet… he loves us, he saves us from spiritual famine, he reconciles us to himself, he mediates blessing upon blessing to us, his ill-deserving brothers. Not only that, He instills in our consciences a sense of guilt and shame for our wrong-doing, and in ways we sometimes don’t understand, he brings us through a spiritual desert and surprises us with a feast at his own table. There he washes our feet, restores our spirits, and weeps over us in joy. This is our Jesus. What a good Brother we have.

Like Jesus’ grace to wretched sinners, Joseph offers full forgiveness to his brothers in spite of their transgressions. And lest we imagine that Jesus’ acquittal of us has the attitude of a stoic, reserved judge, here we see Joseph weeping as he speaks words of comfort, kindness and unconditional reconciliation to his family. Who are we to receive this scandalous grace?

Fighting Sin by Awakening Affections

// February 4th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection

flame

The goal of the Christian life is not external conformity or mindless action, but a passionate love for God informed by the mind and embraced by the will. So the path forward is not to decrease one’s affections but rather to enlarge them and fill them with “heavenly things.” Here one is not trying to escape the painful realities of this life but rather endeavoring to reframe one’s perspective of life around a much larger canvas that encompasses all of reality. To respond to the distorting nature of sin you must set your affections on the beauty and glory of God, the loveliness of Christ, and the wonder of the gospel: “Were our affections filled, taken up, and possessed with these things … what access could sin, with its painted pleasures, with its sugared poisons, with its envenomed baits, have unto our souls?”(John Owen, Works).

Resisting sin, according to this Puritan divine, comes not by deadening your affections but by awakening them to God himself. Do not seek to empty your cup as a way to avoid sin, but rather seek to fill it up with the Spirit of life, so there is no longer room for sin.

- Kelly M. Kapic, Life in the Midst of Battle: John Owen’s Approach to Sin, Temptation, and the Christian Life

The Cure for Cold Religion

// February 4th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection, Doctrine

I came across this quote today by Thomas Watson and it got me thinking about a study I just did on Romans 8:1-11, about life in the Spirit and being spiritually minded. Watson writes:

The reason our affections are so chilled and cold in religion-is that we do not warm them with thoughts of God. Hold a magnifying glass to the sun, and the glass burns that which is near to it. So when our thoughts are lifted up to Christ, the Sun of righteousness, our affections are set on fire. No sooner had the spouse been thinking upon her Savior’s beauty-but she fell into love-sickness. (Song of Sol. 5:8). O saints, do but let your thoughts dwell upon the love of Christ, who passed by angels and thought of you; who was wounded that, out of his wounds, the balm of Gilead might come to heal you; who leaped into the sea of his Father’s wrath, to save you from drowning in the lake of fire! Think of this unparalleled love, which sets the angels wondering-and see if it will not affect your hearts and cause tears to flow forth! – Thomas Watson (The Great Gain of Godliness), p. 87

God-ward thoughts are a magnifying glass to set the heart on fire. I love this. Many people think that theological rigor produces spiritually dry people, robots who simply spew out data and have no experience of God. That’s why I love reading the Puritans. If you read guys like Thomas Watson, John Owen and Jonathan Edwards, you see an amazing combination of reason and affection, thought and feeling, head and heart, study and worship. Edwards hardly ever used the word “Theology”, but rather referred to the pursuit of spiritual understanding as an awareness of “Divinity”. The joy that comes from thoughts on God is what the Puritans called “logic on fire.” Many people these days would discourage other believers from putting an emphasis on the study of theology, but in the lives of the saints who came before us, it is plain to see that the renewal which comes from a mind set on the things of the Spirit–a mind entranced by the beauty of the Gospel–is truly the only cure for cold religion.

HT: Irish Calvinist

Resolved…To Study the Bible

// February 3rd, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection

From Jonathan Edwards’s “Resolutions“:

28. Resolved: To study the Scriptures so steadily, constantly, and frequently, as that I may find, and plainly perceive, myself to grow in the knowledge of the same.

Excuses For Not Praying – D.A. Carson

// January 25th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection, Life

Excerpt from “A Call to Spiritual Reformation: Priorities from Paul and His Prayers” by D.A. Carson

I Am Too Busy

Lillian Guild tells an amusing story of an occasion when she and her husband were driving along and happened to notice a late-model Cadillac with its hood up, parked at the side of the road. Its driver appeared somewhat perplexed and agitated. Mrs. Guild and her husband pulled over to see if they could offer assistance. The stranded driver hastily and somewhat sheepishly explained that he had known when he left home that he was rather low on fuel, but he had been in a great hurry to get to an important business meeting so he had not taken time to full up his tank. The Cadillac needed nothing more than refueling. The Guilds happened to have a spare gallon of fuel with them, so they emptied it into the thirsty Cadillac, and told the other driver of a service station a few miles down the road. Thanking them profusely, he sped off.

Twelve miles or so later, they saw the same car. Hood up, stranded at the side of the road. The same driver, no les bemused than the first time, and even more agitated, was pathetically grateful when they pulled over again. You guessed it: he was in such a hurry for his business meeting that he had decided to skip the service station and press on in the dim hope that the gallon he had received would take him to his destination.

It is hard to believe anyone would be so stupid, until we remember that that is exactly how many of us go about the business of Christian living. We are so busy pressing on to the next item on the agenda that we choose not to pause for fuel. Sadly, Christian leaders may be among the worst offenders. Faced with constant and urgent demands, they find it easy to neglect their calling to the ministry of the Word and prayer because they are so busy. Indeed, they are tempted to invest all of their activity with transcendental significance, so that although their relative prayerlessness quietly gnaws away at the back of their awareness, the noise and pain can be swamped by the sheer importance of all the tings they are busily doing.

I Feel Too Dry Spiritually To Pray

Hidden behind this excuse are two presuppositions that are really quite monstrous. The first is that the acceptability of my approach to God in prayer out to be tied to how I feel. But is God especially impressed with us when we feel joyful or carefree or well rested or pious? Is not the basis of any Christian’s approach to the heavenly Father the sufficiency of Christ’s mediating work on our behalf? Is not this a part of what we mean when we pray “in Jesus’ name”? Are we not casting a terrible slur on the cross when we act as if the usefulness or acceptability of our prayers turns on whether we feel full or dry? True, when we feel empty and dispirited we may have to remind ourselves a little more forcefully that the sole reason why God accepts us is the grace that he ha bestowed upon us in the person and work of his Son. But that is surely better than giving the impression that we are somehow more fit to pray when we feel good.

The second unacceptable presupposition behind this attitude is that my obligation to pray is somehow diminished when I do not feel like praying. This is to assign to my mood or my feelings the right to determine what I ought to do. And that, of course, is unbearably self-centered. It means that I, and I alone, determine what is my duty, my obligation. In short, it means that I am y own god. It is to act as if the Bible never says, “Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer” (Rom. 12:12, emphasis added).

I Feel No Need To Pray

This excuse is a trifle trickier than the first two. Few of us are so crass that we self-consciously reason, “I am too important to pray. I am too self-confident to pray. I am too independent to pray.” Instead, what happens is this: Although abstractly I may affirm the importance of prayer, in reality I may treat prayer as important only in the lives of other people, especially those whom I judge to be weaker in character, more needy, less competent, less productive. Thus, while affirming the importance of prayer, I my not feel deep need for prayer in my own life. I may be getting along so well without much praying that my self-confidence is constantly being reinforced. That breeds yet another round of prayerlessness.

What is God’s response? If Christians who shelter beneath such self-assurance do not learn better ways by listening to the Scriptures, God may address them in the terrible language of tragedy. We serve a God who delights to disclose himself to the contrite, to the lowly of heart, to the meek. When God finds us so puffed up that we do not feel our need for him, it is an act of kindness on his part to take us down a peg or two; it would be an act of judgment to leave us in our vaulting self-esteem.

I Am Too Bitter To Pray

We cannot live long in this world without coming across injustice, chronic lack of fairness. Many of us accept such sin with reasonable equanimity, reasoning that it is, after all, a fallen world. But when the injustice or unfairness is directed against us, our reaction may be much less philosophical. Then we may nurture a spirit of revenge, or at least of bitterness, malice, and gossip. Such sins in turn assure that our prayers are never more than formulaic; eventually such sin may lead to chronic prayerlessness. “How can I be expected to pray when I have suffered so much?” “Don’t talk to me about praying for my enemies: I know who has kept me from being promoted.”

Life itself is consumed by the petty assessment of how well you are perceived by those around you. In this morass of self-pity and resentment, real prayer is squeezed out. In other words, many of us do not want to pray because we know that disciplined, biblical prayer would force us to eliminate sin that we rather cherish. It is very hard to pray with compassion and zeal for someone we much prefer to resent.

I Am Too Ashamed To Pray

Shame encourages us to hide from the presence of God; shame squirrels behind a masking foliage of pleasantries while refusing to be honest; shame foster flight and escapism; shame engenders prayerlessness.

We cannot successfully hide from God anyway, “for a man’s ways are in full view of the LORD, and he examines all his paths” (Prov. 5:21). “Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight. Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom we must give account” (Heb. 4:13). But if it is futile to run from God, our sense of shame can scarcely be an adequate ground to excuse our prayerlessness. Rather, it ought to be a goad that drives us back to the only one who can forgive us and grant us utter absolution, back to the freedom of conscience and the boldness in prayer that follow in the wake of the joyful knowledge that we have been accepted by a holy God because of his grace.

I Am Content With Mediocrity

Some Christians want enough of Christ to be identified with him but not enough to be seriously inconvenienced; they genuinely cling to basic Christian orthodoxy but do not want to engage in serious Bible study; they value moral probity, especially of the public sort, but do not engage in war against inner corruptions; they fret over the quality of the preachers sermon but do not worry much over the quality of their own prayer life. Such Christians are content with mediocrity.

Sin and Delight

// January 23rd, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection

“What we delight in will shape our eternity.” – Ray Ortlund

These passages from the last few chapters of Book 1 of Augustine’s Confessions show us the devastating link between sin and delight. Sinful acts are the result of overruling desires, misplaced pleasures, disorder loves, darksome affections.
In 1.16, speaking of the influence of immoral literature that he studied, Augustine confesses:

“Yet, O my God, in whose sight I now safely recall this,
in my wretchedness I willingly learned these things and took
delight in them.
For this I was called a boy of great promise.”

In 1.18, reflecting on his downward spiral of sin, Augustine confesses:

“Will you keep silent forever?
Even now you will draw out of this most terrible pit the soul
that
seeks you and thirsts for your delights, and whose heart says to you,
‘I have sought your face; your face, Lord, will I seek.’
I was far from your face
in the darkness of my passions
(Like the prodigal son from Luke 15)
Therefore, he departed from you
by lustful affections, that is,
by darksome affections, and this is to be far from your face.”

In 1.18, Augustine also laments how men care so much about what’s on the outside, but neglect what’s on the inside:
“How carefully the sons of men observe the proprieties as to letters and syllables…
and how they neglect everlasting covenants of eternal salvation which they have received from you.
…Certainly, no knowledge of letters is more interior to us than that written in conscience:
that one does to another what he himself does not want to suffer.
How hidden you are, you who dwell on high in silence, you the sole great God!
By unwearying law you impose the penalty of blindness upon unlawful desires.”

In 1.19, Augustine confesses that he sins because his passions were misplaced, wrapped up in the wrong things:

“I did not see the whirlpool of filth into which I was ‘cast away from before your eyes.’
By my deeds I even displeased such men, by countless lies, deceiving tutor
and masters and parents out of love for play, desire to see frivolous shows,
and restless hope of imitating the stage.”

In 1.20, giving thanks to God for all of the good gifts he was given, Augustine confesses:

“Therefore, he who made me is good, and he is my good.
Before him I rejoice for all these goods out of which I had my being even as a child.
But in this was my sin, that not in him but in his creatures, in myself and others,
did I seek pleasures, honors, and truths.
So it was that I was rushed into sorrow, conflict, and error.
Let there be thanks to you, my sweetness, my honor, my trust, my God,
let there be thanks to you for your gifts. Keep them for me.”
This last passage shows us a quintessential definition–a characteristic sine qua non–of sin: delighting in something more than God.
“Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves, because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever! Amen.” Romans 1:24-25
This is my prayer to God today, from 1.5:
“Who will give me help, so that I may rest in you?
Who will help me, so that you will come into my heart and inebriate it,
to the end that I may forget my evils and embrace you, my one good?
Unhappy man that I am, in your mercy, O Lord, my God. Tell me what you are to me.
‘Say to my soul: I am your salvation.’ Say this, so that I may hear you.
Behold, my heart’s ears are turned to you, O Lord:
open them and ‘say to my soul: I am your salvation.’
I will run after that voice, and I will catch hold of you.

Welcome the Bruises

// January 15th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection, Life

“After conversion we need bruising so that reeds may know themselves to be reeds, and not oaks. Even reeds need bruising, by reason of the remainder of pride in our nature, and to let us see that we live by mercy. Such bruising may help weaker Christians not to be too much discouraged, when they see stronger ones shaken and bruised. Thus Peter was bruised when he wept bitterly (Matt. 26:75). This reed, till he met with this bruise, had more wind in him than pith when he said, ‘Though all forsake thee, I will not’ (Matt. 26:33). The people of God cannot be without these examples. The heroic deeds of those great worthies do not comfort the church so much as their falls and bruises do.”

- Richard Sibbes, The Bruised Reed

John Stott on Suffering: If it were not for the Cross…

// January 14th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection, Doctrine

“I could never believe in God, if it were not for the cross… In the real world of pain, how could one worship a God who was immune to it? I have entered many Buddhist temples in different Asian countries and stood respectfully before the statue of Buddha, his legs crossed, arms folded, eyes closed, the ghost of a smile playing round his mouth, a remote look on his face, detached from the agonies of the world. But each time after a while I have had to turn away. And in imagination I have turned instead to that lonely, twisted, tortured figure on the cross, nails through hands and feet, back lacerated, limbs wrenched, brow bleeding from thorn-pricks, mouth dry and intolerably thirsty, plunged in God-forsaken darkness. That is the God for me! He laid aside his immunity to pain. He entered our world of flesh and blood, tears and death. He suffered for us. Our sufferings become more manageable in light of his. There is still a question mark against human suffering, but over it we boldly stamp another mark, the cross which symbolizes divine suffering.”

- John Stott - The Cross of Christ

The Haiti Earthquake of 2010