The Saturday Post(s)

Saturday Post

Worry Writes a Letter. This is equal parts creativity, humor, and wisdom. “Dear Stephen, It’s that time of year again! It’s time to renew your annual subscription to Worry Incorporated! We at Worry Inc. greatly value your business, and wanted to remind you of all the great services that we offer. Here’s a sampling of the great services we are offering this year…”

How Should the Church Respond to the Transgender Question? Best to think about this before your faced with it. “Time Magazine’s bold cover of Laverne Cox—a transgendered woman—brings this issue directly onto center stage.  This is a colossal milestones in the Public Square…how should the church respond?”

Hellfire & Damnation. Douglas Wilson brings some much needed reflection on the Bible’s use of terrifyingly fearful, warning language of the Bible.

Serving Those With Same-Sex Attraction in Our Churches. “Sam Allberry has been a pastor at St. Mary’s Church, Maidenhead…and is a contributor to the website LivingOut.org, which seeks to biblically help those who struggle with same-sex attraction. He is the author of the book Is God Anti-Gay? Sam was kind enough to answer some questions about his experiences with same-sex attraction (SSA), as well as provide insight into how the church can effectively serve those who struggle with SSA.”

 The Hardest Place on Earth to Be a Christian. “Other nations persecute believers, but in Pakistan the entire country has spent generations forming a world view that values the torturing of those that claim the name of Christ.”

Is the Cross Divine Child Abuse? “Jesus received wrath and death that we might receive grace and life. Our debt has been paid by another—in full. And this is anything but divine child abuse. Let me give you four reasons why.”

You Also Need to Hear Romans 8:29. “My wife Maria had just suffered a miscarriage, our third lost pregnancy. The doctors had told us that we’d never be able to have children. Our house was funereal…” What would you console them with?

The God of Diverse Excellencies. There is so much wisdom here. This is a must read.

Mind (Ear?) Blowing…

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Hell Proves the Love of God

Jesus-GardenHell is a teaching that many people are avoid of for many very different reasons. Some people are afraid to speak or even think of such suffering. Others are fearful of what others may think of us if we speak honestly about hell and who is going there. But beyond simply avoiding the doctrine of hell, there are lots of people who straight up reject it.

One of the biggest objections, among the many, to the idea of hell is that it, in the minds of many, is diametrically opposed to true love. The argument is often stated with this question, “How can a loving God send anyone to hell?” The underlying argument is simple: If God is loving then hell cannot really exists. In short, hell is incompatible with love. It is for this very thought I would like to give you something to think about. Could it be that, instead of hell being something that lessens, degrades, or opposes God’s love, it actually proves it? Does hell reveal the love of God?

I believe it does and I think Tim Keller explains it well:

Fairly often I meet people who say, “I have a personal relationship with a loving God, and yet I don’t believe in Jesus Christ at all.” Why, I ask? “My God is too loving to pour out infinite suffering on anyone for sin.” But this shows a deep misunderstanding of both God and the cross. On the cross, God HIMSELF, incarnated as Jesus, took the punishment. He didn’t visit it on a third party, however willing.

So the question becomes: what did it cost your kind of god to love us and embrace us? What did he endure in order to receive us? Where did this god agonize, cry out, and where were his nails and thorns? The only answer is: “I don’t think that was necessary.” But then ironically, in our effort to make God more loving, we have made him less loving. His love, in the end, needed to take no action. It was sentimentality, not love at all. The worship of a god like this will be at most impersonal, cognitive, and ethical. There will be no joyful self-abandonment, no humble boldness, no constant sense of wonder. We could not sing to him, “love so amazing, so divine, demands my soul, my life, my all.” Only through the cross could our separation from God be removed, and we will spend all eternity loving and praising God for what he has done (Rev 5:9-14.)

And if Jesus did not experience hell itself for us, then we ourselves are devalued. In Isaiah, we are told, “The results of his suffering he shall see, and shall be satisfied” (Isaiah 53:11). This is a stupendous thought. Jesus suffered infinitely more than any human soul in eternal hell, yet he looks at us and says, “It was worth it.”What could make us feel more loved and valued than that? The Savior presented in the gospel waded through hell itself rather than lose us, and no other savior ever depicted has loved us at such a cost. (Taken from The Importance of Hell).

The greater and more terrifying hell is in our eyes, the greater and more wonderful the love of Christ will become to us. As the old song sings, “What wondrous love is this that caused the Lord of bliss, To bear the dreadful curse for my soul?” To know the greatness of our sin and the terror of our deserved punishment should lead us to marvel at the love of the One who paid our debt in full. Indeed, hell reveals and proves the immensity of God’s love.

For other great resources on the doctrine of hell, see the following:

Articles:
The Importance of Hell by Tim Keller
Paul On Hell by Douglas Moo
Francis Turretin on the doctrine of Hell
Hell by Thomas Boston
Hell and Annihilationism by Sam Storms
Speaking Seriously and Sensitively About Hell by Ligon Duncan
A Review of Rob Bell’s “Love Wins” by Kevin DeYoung
Hell: Remembering the Aweful Reality in the 9 Marks Journal

Audio:
What Happens to Those Who Have Never Heard the Gospel? by John Piper
Universalism and the Reality of Eternal Punishment by Sinclair Ferguson
The Echo and Insufficiency of Hell by John Piper
How Could a Loving God Send Someone to Hell? by Al Mohler

Books:
Hell Under Fire, Morgan & Peterson (ed.)
What Is Hell? by Morgan & Peterson
Heaven & Hell by Edward Donnelly
Is Hell For Real? by Christopher Morgan
The Other Side of the Good News by Larry Dixon

 

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Two Purposes of Dating

Screen Shot 2014-02-05 at 5.25.08 PMIf you ever want to make things interesting, get Christians to talk about dating. Heads will be scratched. Questions will be asked. Opinions shall abound. Voices may even rise. With a hot donut and some coffee, it could be a good time.

Amidst the numerous (and often militantly held) opinions, I find it helpful to try and ask simple questions in hopes to gain some simple answers. That’s what I would like to do here to help brothers and sisters navigate their way through the stormy and tumultuous seas of dating.

My question: why do we date? 

What could possibly make us participate in something that often causes anxiety, costs money, and could lead to heartbreak? What are the purposes of our dating endeavors? Although there may be others that I miss, allow me to offer what I think the two major purposes of dating are.

1) Gain Relevant Knowledge. The most fundamental purpose of dating is to learn important information about your dating counterpart. Marshall Segall says it well, “The purpose of our dating is determining whether the two of us should get married, so we should focus our effort there.” Above all else, our dates and dating relationship should be geared toward learning. Dating is a school where the teacher and the subject are the same thing: the other person.

With this in mind I think it is important that daters be diligent in intentionally researching and studying your compeer to learn about their personality, future plans, present preferences, and far off hopes and dreams. Dating should bring out the answers to questions like: “How big of a family do you want to have?” “What kind of life do you want to live?” “What kind of church do you want to be a part of?” “What are your beliefs about God?” “What do you think the meaning and purpose of life is?” Amidst the butterflies and chemistry, the dinner and movies, and all fun, getting answers to questions like these should be the central purpose of all our dating.

But, you may ask, why do we need to know all this stuff? Well, that leads us to the next purpose of dating.

2) Get An Answer. The whole reason for purpose number one (to gain knowledge) is so one can confidently answer this question, “Should I marry this person?” Although many people don’t think this way, I think it is essential to know that dating is not a goal, but a means. It is not a destination to arrive at, it is a road to travel on. Just as no one goes camping on the I5 freeway, nor should anyone make dating an end in itself. Knowing whether or not you should marry someone is the destination that the road of dating should help us arrive at. After gaining all the right information, daters should be serious in asking and confidently answering the question, “Should I marry this person?”

There most definitely is more to be said here. Fro example, we need to understand what marriage is and what it should look like in order to know whether or not we should marry someone. But the reason for this post was to get down to the most basic reasons for dating. In the maze and haze of intentional pre-marital relationships, I have found these two purposes to be extremely helpful in cutting through the fog and providing good direction for daters everywhere.

For some other great pieces on dating, check out these pieces:

  1. Dating to Display Jesus by Marshall Segall
  2. Spiritually & Emotionally, How Far Is Too Far Before Marriage? by John Piper
  3. Nine Lessons for Breakups by Marshall Segall
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A Fierce Shepherd

Teachings_of_Jesus_15_of_40._the_good_shepherd._Jan_Luyken_etching._Bowyer_BibleAllow me to take you through a quick exercise. Pay attention to what image pops into your mind when you hear this next word. Are you ready? Alright, here’s the word…

Shepherd.

What pictures came into your mind? Most likely, the images you saw were characterized by themes of gentleness, care, nurture, and comfort. If that’s what popped into your head, that’s ok! No, it is actually very good! The Bible does see the shepherd as a guy who knows, loves, cares for, nurtures his sheep (see Psalm 23 & John 10). This is a glorious truth that Christians need to believe and practice with all their heart. Fathers, the shepherds of their families, are called to be gentle and caring. Pastors, shepherds of their churches, ought to know, love, and nurture their people. Our Good Shepherd, Jesus Christ, is kind, loving, gentle, and nurturing and we are the blessed sheep of His pasture. But that is not all the shepherd is…

In our emphasis on the gentle and caring aspects of the Shepherd’s work, we often neglect other very important aspects of the shepherd’s calling: his strong and fierce protection of his sheep. Alastair Roberts takes up a brush and paints for us a much forgotten aspect of a shepherd’s work.

The most common biblical picture of the leader is the shepherd. However, the biblical vision of the shepherd is quite different from ours. The biblical shepherd is, like our conception of the shepherd, a figure who is gentle, nurturing, and protective of the flock. However, a large proportion of the biblical images of the shepherd focus upon the shepherd as a figure of conflict and violence, someone who protects the sheep by killing wolves, bears, and lions, who fights off thieves, bandits, and rival shepherds, who lays down his life for the flock. The shepherd is clearly called to act out of love, but this love is far from a generic niceness. Rather, because the shepherd loves the sheep, he gives the wolves no quarter. Attacking wolves is the loving thing to do. The sheep are comforted by the rod with which the shepherd drives off or destroys enemies, like God brought the land of Egypt to its knees using the rods of the shepherds Moses and Aaron.

In short, the Shepherd indeed has a staff to lead, guide, and care for His sheep, but He also holds a rod to beat, drive off, and kill anything that threatens the sheep of His pasture. Let us never forget that our Good Shepherd, Jesus Christ, is not only our caregiver and nurturer, but He is also our fierce protector. He has a staff and a rod. He not only uses His hands to feed and carry us, but he uses them also to break the necks of those who seek our harm.

May God grant His church pastors (i.e. shepherds) who take seriously their responsibility to protect their churches; may we gain shepherds who aggressively protect their flocks. Shepherds who take seriously the charge of Paul to, “So guard…God’s people” (Acts 20:28). May we have fathers who not only provide for the good of their children, but also actively protect them from all that threatens their welfare. Rid us of cowardly, passive, and irresponsible shepherds who let their sheep be massacred by whomever or whatever comes along. When wolves arrive, may the shepherds arise. God give us fierce shepherds like Jesus.

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“Lord, Look at My Shells!”

GameChangers

These three paragraphs have graciously haunted me for over 6 years. I hope they do the same for you.

John Piper:

“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.” (Taken from Don’t Waste Your Life, P. 45–6). Get a free pdf of the book here.

Don’t live for shells.

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On Vacation

vacation-circled-on-calendar-jpgTo any regular readers,

I am currently on a short vacation with my wife and will not be writing anything until next Tuesday. During this short break allow me to point your attention to the book recommendation list under the tab above titled Books, Books, & More Books. It is a building list, but there are quite a few books already listed organized according to the topic they address.

Thanks for reading!

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What Makes Heaven Heaven?

D.L. Moody | 1837-1899

D.L. Moody | 1837-1899

And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away. Revelation 21:3-4

Often times when people speak of heaven they talk much of the streets of gold, the mansions, and the absence of sickness, pain, and tears. And all this for good reason; those are all things to be hoped for. But those things, as good as they are, are not the reason why Heaven is Heaven. To say it shortly: Heaven is good because God is there. The central and greatest treasure of Heaven is the God who dwells there in the fullness of His glory.

To illustrate this, the old evangelist D.L. Moody was fond of telling this story.

I heard of a child whose mother was very sick; and while she lay very low, one of the neighbors took the child away to stay with her until the mother should be well again. But instead of getting better, the mother died; and they thought they would not take the child home until the funeral was all over; and would never tell her about her mother being dead. So a while afterward they brought the little girl home. First she went in the sitting-room to find her mother; then she went to the parlor to find her mother there; and she went from one end of the house to the other and could not find her. At last she said, “Where is my mamma?” And when they told her her mamma was gone, the little thing wanted to go back to the neighbor’s house again. Home had lost its attractive to her since her mother was not there any long. No; it’s not the jasper walls and the pearly gates that make heaven attractive. It is the being with God. We shall be in the presence of the Redeemer; we shall be forever with the Lord. (Taken from Heaven by D.L. Moody).

As the song sings it

The Bride eyes not her dress, but her dear Groom’s  face;
I will not gaze at glory, but on my King of grace.
Not at the crown He gives me, but on His pierced hand;
The Lamb is all the glory of Immanuel’s land.

As Milton Vincent puts it, “Yes, there is a street of gold in heaven, but is there any doubt where the street leads? Unquestionably, it leads straight to the throne of God Himself, as do all God’s gifts to me in the gospel.” The good news of the gospel is that it brings us to live eternally with the God of the gospel. Heaven would be hell without Him.

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The Saturday Post(s)

Saturday Post

What’s God’s Will for My Life? R.C. Sproul does his thang and answers this frequently asked question by helping us think through what we mean by God’s will.

How to Keep Your Kids From Leaving Jesus After Graduation. Some great counsel here. “On the weekend of our oldest son’s graduation from High School here are some thoughts I have about keeping the kids from “running out the door” and away from God and their family.”

Church Membership. Pastor Derick is excited about this book. And so am I. Make sure to read the 12 reasons for why church membership matters.

Seven Reasons Why Christians Doubt. I want to briefly give you some of the more “mundane” causes of why we, as Christians, might experience doubt, whether it be doubt in the existence of God, doubt in his love for us, or doubt in our salvation…”

10 Ways for College Students to Not Waste Their Summer. These are excellent. “Prepare now to spend these months away from tests and dining hall food enjoying rich and plentiful grace from God. Here are 10 ways to help you grow in your faith while on summer break…”

They Asked If I Was Prepared to Die as a Christian. “’Then they asked me whether I would convert to Islam and when I refused they asked whether I was prepared to die as a Christian. My wife was crying but I could not deny Christ. I felt powerful, unafraid, I don’t know why.’ Before he could refuse a second time, a bullet pierced his neck.”

The Preacher Stung by Joy. A profile on Matt Chandler (a 39 year old pastor from Texas who has brain cancer and preaches a big gospel). I am thankful for him.

When Your Dad Is a Computer Graphics Specialist. This is what home movies look like. For more awesome clips, go here.

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Husbands, Do You Dare?

MarriageMarriages are not static, but dynamic. They are not like rocks that never change and don’t need tending to, but they are like trees that change with each coming season and need lots of water, sunshine, and good soil. Therefore, marriages are never going to stay the same, but will vary in their vitality, health, and fruitfulness with each coming year. Given this reality, I encourage you to think about this one question, “What is the current state of my marriage?”

Now that question is painfully vague and probably won’t yield to much helpful discussion and evaluation. We need to be much more specific and pointed in reflecting upon our marriages if we want them to be ever growing for the better. To help in this, I have found these questions from Rob Lister to be immensely helpful in accessing the state of the union (ha, see what I did there?).

Here are Rob Lister’s 15 questions for spouses to ask one another.

1) On a scale of 1-10, give your overall assessment of our marriage in the past six months. To be sure, this is a very broad and subjective item, but I have found it helpful to open the conversation with an item of this kind of breadth, because it helps to prime the pump. Obviously, you won’t hit on a ton of specifics with this one—that’s what the rest of the questions are for—but I have been truly amazed at just how much discussion this assessment alone can generate, as various issues come to mind. From there, we’re off and running. Follow-up questions in the event that the conversation fails to gain traction initially:

2) What have been the strengths of the past six months? What would make your assessment higher?

3) How has the husband’s leadership been over the past six months? The wife’s support? Follow-up: How can I improve in fulfilling my respective role?

4) How is your walk with God, both personally and as a couple?
Where do you see ungodliness in my life?

5) Do I have any unconfessed sin that needs to be shared with my spouse?

6) Are we guarding meaningful time together? Prayer? Conversation? Date Night?

7) How is our sex life?

8) What could I do to make you feel more loved/secure/respected?

9) How can I serve you better?

10) What are the issues that we need to anticipate in the upcoming six months?

11) What’s your greatest personal disappointment and your greatest satisfaction in the last six months?

12) How can I best pray for you?

13) What are our major upcoming mutual prayer concerns?

14) Spend a few moments, in an encouraging fashion, sharing several of the things that each of you loves and appreciates about the other.

15) Then close, by spending some concerted time in prayer for those prayer concerns you just shared, as well as thanking God for his faithfulness to you as a couple over the past six months.

If you are like me, thinking about hearing the answers to some of these questions is scary. But, I believe these questions, if husbands took the initiative to work through them with their wives, would provide very important truths that would, if listened to, lead to stronger and more healthy marriages.

Before you go off and try to nail this puppy down in one date night, make sure you take a look at Lister’s very helpful guidelines for the conversation.

(1) Obviously, both husband and wife should take a turn answering each question. So, when it’s your turn to listen, listen. One reason this practice can be especially helpful is because it gives clear license to the other person to say what’s on his/her mind—especially when he/ she knows that the other person is really going to listen. Do not rush to debate or self-defense. Start by listening. Your spouse loves you and knows you very well. There is likely to be quite a bit of truth in what he/she says about you. You would be wise not to scorn their counsel or reproof (Prov 12:1; 15:31–32).

(2) When it’s your turn to talk, say it with love, but speak honestly. Your spouse certainly cannot heed your concerns if he or she does not know your concerns.

(3) Share criticisms, if need be, but share encouragement too. No one is going to look forward to doing this regularly, if he always and only gets beat up by it. To this end, I suggest trying to open and close the conversation with statements of several things that the husband and wife love and appreciate about the other. But, the individual questions should also be looked at as opportunities to share encouragement and thankfulness as well as critique.

(4) Be quick to confess sin and quick to forgive. If you do, the whole conversation will be enhanced all the more as it becomes clearly centered on the cross.

(5) Come with a notepad handy. I always jot down our responses, areas for growth, and new issues or questions to factor into consideration in subsequent evaluations. Don’t waste the opportunity for growth that can come from this conversation by neglecting to make note of those things that need some attention.

(6) Because you’re both sinners, don’t expect that you will ever achieve perfection, and don’t become discouraged, over time, when such perfection inevitably does not come. Instead, approach this spiritual discipline with the mindset that you will seek to use it, by God’s grace, to promote a progression in growth over time.

I highly recommend you read the entire article here for other very good wisdom and counsel about accessing the state of your union.

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Can You Say, “Imitate Me”?

ApprenticeshipD.A. Carson asks, ““Do you ever say to a young Christian, ‘Do you want to know what Christianity is like? Watch me!’ If you never do, you are unbiblical.” 

Unbiblical? How so? Well, because Paul gives us many examples of this when he told countless Christians to imitate him as they grew in their Christian life (1 Cor. 4:15-17; 11:1; Phil. 3:17; 4:9; 2 Thess. 3:7-9; 2 Tim. 3:10-11) and Paul tells his young pastors to do the same in their ministries as well (1 Tim. 4:12; Titus 2:7-8). Christians are called to live in an imitatable way. Our lives should teach along with our words.

Dr. Carson recounts the power of this truth in telling a story from his student years:

As a chemistry undergraduate at McGill University, with another chap I started a Bible study for unbelievers. That fellow was godly but very quiet and a bit withdrawn.

I had the mouth, I fear, so by default it fell on me to lead the study. The two of us did not want to be outnumbered, so initially we invited only three people, hoping that not more than two would come. Unfortunately, the first night all three showed up, so we were outnumbered from the beginning.

By week five we had sixteen people attending, and still only the initial two of us were Christians. I soon found myself out of my depth in trying to work through John’s Gospel with this nest of students. On many occasions the participants asked questions I had no idea how to answer.

But in the grace of God there was a graduate student on campus called Dave Ward. He had been converted quite spectacularly as a young man. He was, I suppose, what you might call a rough jewel. He was slapdash, in your face, with no tact and little polish, but he was aggressively evangelistic, powerful in his apologetics, and winningly bold. He allowed people like me to bring people to him every once in a while so that he could answer their questions. Get them there and Dave would sort them out!

So it was that one night I brought two from my Bible study down to Dave. He bulldozed his way around the room, as he always did. He gave us instant coffee then, turning to the first student, asked, ‘Why have you come?’ The student replied, ‘Well, you know, I think that university is a great time for finding out about different points of view, including different religions. So I’ve been reading some material on Buddhism, I’ve got a Hindu friend I want to question, and I should also study some Islam. When this Bible study started I thought I’d get to know a little more about Christianity—that’s why I’ve come.’

Dave looked at him for a few moments and then said, ‘Sorry, but I don’t have time for you.’

‘I beg your pardon?’ said the student.

‘Look,’ Dave replied, ‘I’ll loan you some books on world religions; I can show you how I understand Christianity to fit into all this, and why I think biblical Christianity is true—but you’re just playing around. You’re a dilettante. You don’t really care about these things; you’re just goofing off. I’m a graduate student myself, and I don’t have time—I do not have the hours at my disposal to engage in endless discussions with people who are just playing around.’

He turned to the second student: ‘Why did you come?’

‘I come from a home that you people call liberal,’ he said. ‘We go to the United Church and we don’t believe in things like the literal resurrection of Jesus—I mean, give me a break. The deity of Christ, that’s a bit much. But my home is a good home. My parents love my sister and me, we are a really close family, we worship God, we do good in the community. What do you think you’ve got that we don’t have?’

For what seemed like two or three minutes, Dave looked at him.

Then he said, ‘Watch me.’

As it happened, this student’s name was also Dave. This Dave said, ‘I beg your pardon?’

Dave Ward repeated what he had just said, and then expanded: ‘Watch me. I’ve got an extra bed; move in with me, be my guest—I’ll pay for the food. You go to your classes, do whatever you have to do, but watch me. You watch me when I get up, when I interact with people, what I say, what moves me, what I live for, what I want in life. You watch me for the rest of the semester, and then you tell me at the end of it whether or not there’s a difference.’

This Dave did not take up Dave Ward on the offer literally. But he did begin to watch him and to meet with him, and the Lord drew him. Today he is serving as a medical missionary.

Carson exhorts us all well:

You who are older should be looking out for younger people and saying in effect, ‘Watch me.’

Come — I’ll show you how to have family devotions.

Come — I’ll show you how to do Bible study.

Come on — let me take you through some of the fundamentals of the faith.

Come — I’ll show you how to pray.

Let me show you how to be a Christian husband and father, or wife and mother.

At a certain point in life, that older mentor should be saying other things, such as: Let me show you how to die. Watch me. (Taken from The Resurrection to His Return).

This little video captures the heart of the life that says, “Watch me”.

HT: Justin Taylor

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