A Book Unlike Any Other
The Bible may be a book, but it is a book unlike any other. The Bible is inspired—breathed out by God and in that way perfectly reflects the mind and will of God. The Bible is also complete, sufficient, inerrant, and infallible. Because the Bible is all these things and so many more, it is powerful and effective. Because it is God’s Word, it comes with all the power and authority of God—power and authority sufficient to change us from the outside in.
Michael Horton says, “God’s word does not merely impart information; it actually creates life. It’s not only descriptive; it’s effective too. God speaking is God acting.” Thus, as we read the Bible, the Bible reads us. As we study the Bible, the Bible studies us. As we examine its every word, it examines our every thought, our every action, our every desire, our every inclination. It identifies our shortcomings; it calls us to change. But more than that, it provokes and promotes and causes that change.
How do we know? Because “the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart” (Hebrews 4:12). As God speaks through the Bible, God acts through the Bible, for “God speaking is God acting.”
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A La Carte (October 5)
Good morning. May the God of love and peace be with you today.
(Yesterday on the blog: My Own Little Paradise in an Ocean of Ugliness)
Men, Are You Submissive?
“Submission. Of all the words in the Bible, this may be one of the least popular. After all, our cultural moment is not one that values a posture of submission to authorities. On the contrary, our world insists we should challenge and critique those over us.”
How Personal Policies Can Help You Fight Decision Fatigue
Here’s an interesting little productivity tip. “The power of personal policies is that they relieve you of exerting excess energy in making small choices. Personal policies minimize decision fatigue.”
A Diligent Wife
Lauren Washer has begun a 31-day series that I expect many women will find helpful.
Going Home
“As surely as I know no earthly location is completely home, I also know God put in our hearts a desire for home. That yearning points to a place where we nestle in the heart of Jesus, and He inhabits ours. It promises a place of mansions prepared for us, streets of gold and eternity secured.”
Tell the Truth
Kristin tells another anecdote from her earlier days and shares a lesson through it.
The Measure of Reading Productively: Don’t Count the Numbers
Robert Zink: “The most frequent question I am asked is, ‘How do you read so much?’ which is often followed by, ‘How can I read more like you?’ Those questions, though, fail to capture the motivation, and as a result, do not allow us to measure productive reading.”
The Man of Lawlessness
“Perhaps you’ve heard of the Man of Lawlessness, otherwise known as the lawless one, who ‘opposes and exalts himself against every so-called god or object of worship, so that he takes his seat in the temple of God, proclaiming himself to be God’ (2 Thess 2:4).” Peter Krol takes us to the context of the passage to better understand this Man of Lawlessness.
Flashback: Those Exquisite Forms of Love That Do Not Speak Your Language
When I demand that people speak my preferred love language, when it becomes the one way I receive love, I unnecessarily narrow my experience of love. I miss out on all of those “exquisite forms of love that do not ‘speak my language’.”It is not a bad thing to live from hand to mouth when the mouth is the mouth of faith and the hand is the hand of our loving Father. —Theodore Cuyler
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A Prayer for My Parent Heart
It can, at times, be difficult to know what and how to pray for our children and what and how to pray for ourselves as their parents. This is true when they are young but, in my experience, becomes even more prominent as they grow older. This is why it is helpful to have books like Kathleen Nielson’s Prayers of a Parent. In the volume of prayers for adult children, she includes this one which is “For My Parent Heart.” It provides words that every parent can pray for themselves and for the children God has given them.
All I ask you for my child, O Lord,is all you’ve given to me, in Christ;there is no measure of your steadfast lovethat reaches to the heavens;I ask from out of my abundance in knowing you.
In all my asking, let me restin your great love and faithfulness;you are the Father in heavenwho provides a refuge for your childrenin the shadow of your wings;they feast on the abundance of your house;you give them drink from the river of your delights.I pray trusting your provision for my child,for I have tasted just how good is your provision.
My life, and my child’s lifeare not our own, but gifts from you,O God, who are yourself the fountain of life.What grace, that you should give me lifeand let me nurture another, given by you.What most amazing grace,that you should bring life to a soul that’s dead,through your own Son,light of the world, the light of life.
I thank you that you call your children, Lord,to faith in Christ your Son, our Savior,and to a home where we will feast forever, with you. -
Your Kids Need You To Help Them Build Their Identity
It has always been important that children establish their identity. From the time kids are young, they are being formed in a host of ways and gradually coming to terms with who they are and who they will become. Historically, identity arose from outside—from the people they came from, the place they were born, and the expectations of parents and community. An innovation of the modern West is that identity is now expected to come from within. Identity is meant to be determined by the self rather than anyone or anything else.
Grounded in Grace
Today’s children and teens are feeling immense pressure to determine their own identity. Their parents are feeling the pressure as well—the pressure of needing their children to decide who they will be as they grow older and become independent. Christian parents are feeling the pressure of helping their children find an identity that is consistent with God’s design for their children and with God’s design for humanity. This is the subject of Jonathan Holmes’ new book Grounded in Grace—a tremendously helpful book for parents and anyone else who influences children and teens as they grow in their self-understanding.
Our children are under enormous pressure to figure out who they are in an environment and culture that is sending them conflicting messages.
“Stand out, and be who you want to be!” but on the flip side we don’t like who you are choosing to be and we’re going to make fun of you for it.
“Live your own truth, and don’t let anyone take that away from you!” but if someone else’s truth contradicts “your truth,” our teens are told that those individuals are dangerous and toxic.
“Who cares what other people think about you? You do you!” but you do need to care what other people think about you because you need their approval.So where should children turn? Holmes wants them to turn to Scripture with the help of their parents (primarily, but also pastors, and other mentors) to begin to form an identity that is rooted in an understanding of who God is, the purpose for which he has created us, and what he means for us to be. “My hope is that parents can understand the challenges our kids are facing related to developing, maintaining, and resting in their identity. However, the contents of this book will be beneficial for a variety of individuals who are teaching and discipling children and teens: youth workers, Sunday school teachers, Christian school workers, and Christian counselors.”
He begins the book by looking at different ways identity is formed—the traditional and the contemporary. Today’s parents probably grew up around the tail end of the dominance of the traditional way so may fail to understand some of the pressures their children are facing today. Yet Holmes is not so naive as to believe the traditional view is without its flaws, so he helps parents see where they may pressure their children in ways that may seem intuitive and superior but are still unhelpful.
Having done that, he looks at five different areas where kids and teens tend to struggle with their identity. He looks at academics, sports, moralism, gender, and sexuality. The first three represent areas in which kids begin to build their identity on what they do—their performance in the classroom, sports field, or church. The final two represent areas in which kids begin to build their identity on what they feel about their gender or their sexual longings.
What Holmes advocates is building an identity on the gospel rather than anything that arises from performance or feelings. “What we need to pass on to our children … is an identity that is received and not achieved. A gospel identity comes from outside of us and relies on the unchanging, steadfast words of a God who is the final authority. We do nothing to earn God’s approval. He creates us in his image, redeems us from sin, and brings us into his family. The identity he gives us is bigger than ourselves, more permanent than anything we could ever imagine, and true today and forever regardless of our circumstances or situations.” Not surprisingly, yet counterintuitively for the modern generation, it is when kids focus on discovering God’s purpose and intention for their lives, as revealed in his Word, that matters of identity come into focus and become resolved. “When we focus our energies and passion on discovering what God has called us to do, our very identity often takes care of itself as we find our meaning and purpose in him. What an amazing truth that we can pass along and live out before our children.”
With lots of illustrations and many insights originating from his counseling practice, Holmes offers a book that will be a tremendous blessing to today’s parents. It will help them help themselves as they teach their children about this matter of identity and it will help them help their children as they ground their self-understanding in something so much more lasting than performance and something so much more enduring than feelings. It will help parents help their children establish their identity in the gospel of Jesus Christ and the work he has accomplished on our behalf. I am thankful that Holmes has written this book and gladly commend it to all parents.