"Then do at once ask for the Bleeding Charity......everything here is for the asking and nothing can be bought."
Spurgeon24
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Name: Nathanael (Nate)
Country: United States
State: New York
Metro: Rockland
Birthday: 5/19/1981
Gender: Male


Interests: The Bible,Theology Leah, Snowboarding, Backpacking, Music (such as Coldplay, Guster, Derek Webb, Caedmons Call, Badly Drawn Boy, J. Cash, Andrew Peterson, U2, Jack Johnson, Elliot Smith, Indellible Grace, Soverign Grace Worship), History, the Spiritual Disciplines, reading, and lots of other stuff...
Expertise: Not much
Occupation: Student/youthworker
Industry: Nonprofit


Message: message me
Website: visit my website


Member Since: 3/3/2006

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Friday, September 28, 2007

Dealing with Sin

So, I'll talk about this soon friends (Matt).  In the mean time, I have to get to work.


Tuesday, June 19, 2007

It's not worth settling for less.

I have been discouraged by my sins over and over again.  The story of my life is Romans 7.  I heartily agree with God's word, that I should  be joyful, be zealous, be sacraficial in my living, be pure, be couragous for the reputation of Christ, be better in the use of my time, be...,be...,be...  I fall short of God's expectations in more ways than I care to admit, or could ever even dream.  I am so utterly sinnful that I can't do anything purely good, but rather, my best deeds seem to be mingled with some form of sefishness, self-rightousness, or self-absorbsion. 

So, where does that leave me?  I could just embrace the fact that I am a sinner, and get on with life thinking, "well, at least I'll get into heaven."  But this is embracing my sin, when my sin problem as discouraging as it is, has been dealt with once and for all.  Jesus absorbed the hell I deserve on the cross, and by faith I enter into favor with God, which he won for me.  Thus St. Paul rejoices in Romans 7 about salvation through Jesus Christ, because it is in Christ that I am saved from this "body of sin and death".  8:1 says that there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ.  So even though I remain a sinner, I am delivered. 

Paul goes on to say in chapter 8 that we are obligated not to what he calls "the flesh".  He is saying that we are not obligated to fulfill the sinful desires that remain in us.  We owe our sinfulness nothing.  Paul goes on to say "for if you live according to the flesh, you will die, but if by the Spirit, you put to death the deads of the body you will live."  I owe my flesh nothing.  I have no debt to pay it.  According to Paul the only thing I owe it is Spirit inspired war. 

God has not called me to embrace the presence of my sin.  He has not called me to hide Christ because sin abounds from me.  He has called us, at the expense of His Son, into a relationship with Him, and a pursuit of holiness.  I am not called to get used to the fact that I am a sinner.  I must as the writer of Hebrews says, "lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurence the race that is set before us, looking to JESUS, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God." 

  


Monday, May 07, 2007

A Challenging Read

Betrayal

Undermining the gospel in the pursuit of relevance | Andrée Seu

I received a last-minute invitation to a small gathering of people each connected to writing in some way, the purpose of the soirée being to discuss "Christian writers engaging culture." I will be deliberately vague about identifying details except to say that a well-known columnist for a Christian magazine also came.

We had been assigned to read three articles (by said well-known columnist) and to mull over four questions in preparation for our time together in the cozy living room of a hospitable couple. I was hoping to blend into the woodwork but was also brainstorming the questions, just in case, as I drove south on the Schuylkill expressway. "Is there such a thing as a 'Christian' writer?" "What does 'Christian' writing look like?" "Do you have a sense of mission in your writing?" "In what ways is writing a community affair?"

"Whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God" was going to be my basic answer to question No. 1 if they tapped me. Plus all that good counsel from Dr. John Frame on keeping in mind the fruit of the Spirit whenever I sit at the keyboard: Does my writing exhibit love? Is there joy in it, and gratitude? Am I writing in God's peace, with zeal for unity? And so on through the list.

It takes, I would say, two minutes to get the sense of a group's weltanschauung. This is a subtle thing but unmistakable, and I soon knew that my small comments were not going to fit in. I felt a little silly, like you would if you had prepared a simple algebraic equation for show-and-tell only to find out all the other kids were doing calculus.

There was the obligatory let's-go-around-the-room-and-tell-something-about-yourself-and-why-you're-here moment, where I learned about the aspiring poet, the woman massaging a novel for five years, the New Testament professor weary of a readership of about 25 for his recondite publications and dreaming of doing popular nonfiction, and the budding filmmaker who conceded that custodial work pays the bills.

When my turn came I described myself as a suddenly unemployed café worker (which is true). And then, because I had to give an account for my presence at the meeting, I said I wrote for a Christian newsmagazine. "Oh, do you write news?" someone followed up. "No, I just do the devotional stuff."

My only other contribution of the evening was a garbled description of Frame's Triangle with its angles Normative (knowledge of God's Word), Situational (knowledge of the world), and Existential (personal relationship with God, knowledge of oneself, talent) as circumscribing the enterprise of Christian writing. But it didn't fly and I didn't try to get it off the ground.

Many interesting things were subsequently said about poetry and finding one's voice and persevering through the hurtful refusal of the world to give due recognition. I was stunned to silence by the eloquence of my companions, who must all write perfect first drafts, judging by their extemporaneous verbal gifts.

No firm initiatives were generated for "engaging culture," and I drove home with a not unpleasant flat brainwave and went to bed. Six a.m. arrived, the alarm clock rang, and I heard the word clearly in my head: "Betrayal." If there had been a rooster outside my window it would have crowed thrice. "Devotional stuff." That's what I told them I did, and in one man-fearing phrase relegated to backwater the kind of writing that is pointedly about Jesus and about living for Him. If you want to kill the gospel, no need to do it with outright denial; just compartmentalize it sweetly.

I thought some more about the previous evening. We came as Christians, we prayed before and aft, we said we were about the gospel. But somehow something wasn't sharp. These days I am nudging the fulcrum further to the right of where I thought that unbelief begins. It resides in the flat-out rejection of the miracles and Resurrection in the liberal churches, but is also inchoate in parlor gatherings of orthodox believers where exuberant exclamation of "I love Jesus!" would feel embarrassing.

One senses these things. One is obliged to take a stand against slippage. When that happens, then you will see "Christian writers engaging culture."

http://www.worldmag.com/articles/12935


Thursday, April 12, 2007

From His Fullness

I have been spending some time thinking about and praying through John 1:1-18.  I love it.  "In him was life, and the life was the light of men."  I read that and if I'm awake at all on a spiritual level, will end up praying that the life of God will live in me afresh.  I read on and want to be like John, who "came as a witness to bear witness about the light."  It would be sweet to come to the end of my life, and look back at how I have lived, and see that I have bore witness about the Light.  When people think about John, they will often think of his words "Behold the Lamb of God".  May they think about me as such.   


Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Something New Coming My Way

I haven't made any entries for a while, in part because I have been preoccupied by a youth director position that I have applied for at a church in New Hampshire.  Well, they voted this weekend, and things went well.  I am being invited to pastor their youth.  I am excited.  This is a huge provision from God.  There are divine fingerprints on everything here.  So I ask for your prayers, as I enter this new phase of life.

Grace to you from the Babe in the straw.




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