Month: July 2013

  • "we have a knowledge of Jesus problem in America" ~ Dalton Thomas @ Ekballo #3

    In my last two posts Calvinism & missions? Indeed! Ekballo # 1: TULIP & prayer to the Lord of the harvest and "We're not on Christian cruise ships. We are on battleships." David Sitton @ Ekballo # 2," I blogged on the first two plenary talks given at the Ekballo Midwest Conference, held April 19-20, 2013:

    Scott Anderson's talk The Essential Nature of Prayer in the Gospel Mission found here:  http://youtu.be/fuA3p5X32sE

    David Sitton's talk Propel the Church, Harvest the Nations found here:  http://youtu.be/6JBqc29qmkA

    Today, I'd like to present the third and final plenary talk, "Martyrdom and the Eternal Purpose of the Church" given by Dalton Thomas.

    First off, in case you might be tempted to skip over Dalton Thomas' opening prayer, please don't! As you listen, you'll hear the humble and fiery heart and soul of a young man who loves Jesus and is sober-minded and vigilant, single-eyed for Christ, zealous for God's name, and seeking to bring glory to God. Thomas is 27 years old, and given that I'm over 50, I am supremely blessed and encouraged whenever I see God raising up such men and women in the next generation in this era when so many are at ease and complacent in Zion, a day of cheap grace, lukewarmness, and small things here in the West.

    Thomas' main text was Ephesians 3:7-13, but before he gets to the text, he prefaces it with the following words (boldface mine, throughout):

    The call to martyrdom is not the exaltation of death over life. It is the exaltation of Christ over all things... It's not the call to seek death, it's the call to seek Jesus. And the more that we find Him, the more that we find He is more valuable than life, and more valuable than what we lose in death. And so, the more we love Him, the more we love our lives less, and the more the task of global missions becomes very easy to lay hold of. I don't think we have a missions problem in America. I don't think we have an evangelism problem in America. I think we have a knowledge of Jesus problem in America.

    I can't express my delight at hearing these words; they are so very relevant. If you've been reading my blog for any length of time, you've heard the steady drumbeat of our need to be rooted in right doctrine.

    August_Müller_TagebucheintragAs Thomas introduces the main Scripture text, he says:

    This is the text we're gonna look at tonight -- Ephesians chapter 3, which you're probably thinking, "This is not a martyrdom passage." It is.

    . . . I do believe this is the most important statement in the Bible about the nature of the Church. Paul uses a phrase that we're gonna to look at tonight, that I think just needs to be contemplated for a couple decades, which is this phrase:  "the eternal purpose of God."

    Now tonight, before we look at this, you know, it would be interesting, if we passed around a piece of paper to everybody, and a pen, and said, "Write down your definition of the eternal purpose of God. Fold the paper up and send it up here, and we're gonna go through them." Everyone would give good, Biblical answers, Bible verses that stuck. But I found a number of years ago, when the Lord laid hold of me with this passage, I realized is that what I would have written is not even close to what Paul defined as the eternal purpose of God. I think in order for us to rightly reckon and apprehend the call to frontier missions, I think we need to have a perspective on the eternal purpose of God, lest we be disconnected from the center of it all.

     

    As you listen, see how your definition of the eternal purpose of God lines up with the Biblical definition, which the apostle Paul unfolds in Ephesians 3.

    WARNING:  Be prepared to have your head blown up –– but by that I mean blown up in a good way –– more particularly, to have your theology blown up, to have your understanding of God refined and purified and renewed and expanded –– I only say that because I felt like my own head was blowing up (in a good sense) as I first heard Dalton Thomas in person, and once again as I reviewed my notes on his talk a couple months ago, and then once more as I've relistened to the whole talk again over the past few days...

    http://youtu.be/47nP5JAqTxY - Dalton Thomas // Martyrdom and the Eternal Purpose of the Church

    Holy Spirit, You are the Spirit of truth. We confess we have a knowledge of Jesus problem in the Church in America, as well as in our own souls. How can we know God as we ought, how can we love God as we ought, how can we serve God as we ought, how can we live to God as we ought, how can we die for God as we ought, how can we glorify God as we ought –– unless we know the truth about God? Our adversary, the devil, is a deceiver. He is a liar and the father of lies. He transforms himself into an angel of light. He wants to keep us from knowing the truth and loving the truth. Holy God, be merciful and gracious to us, and pour out Your Holy Spirit to lead us into all truth. Apart from Your opening our eyes, we have no genuine spiritual sight of You and of Your truth. Your Word is right and pure and true. As we read, listen to, meditate upon, and study Your Word, sanctify and cleanse us. Blow up any false, incorrect, impure, and faulty theological understandings we might be clinging to. Blow up any false, incorrect, impure, and faulty theological underpinnings we may be building upon. Lead us into all truth for the sake of Your blessed name, so we might be a delight and a joy to You, and bring praise, honor and glory to You throughout all the earth. Amen.

    ecclesia reformata semper reformanda secundum verbum Dei

    [the church reformed, always being reformed, according to the word of God]


     

    Photo credits:

    Work found at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:August_Müller_Tagebucheintrag.jpg / {{PD-Art|PD-old-70}}

    Work found at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:PSM_V56_D0465_Hollow_dynamite_cartridge_elevation_view.png / PD

  • "We're not on Christian cruise ships. We are on battleships." David Sitton @ Ekballo # 2

    In my previous post, Calvinism, TULIP, missions and prayer to the Lord of the harvest, I shared the first plenary talk from the Ekballo Midwest Conference held April 19-20, 2013, given by Scott Anderson. The second talk at Ekballo Midwest was given by David Sitton, President of To Every Tribe (http:/www.toeverytribe.com). (You can read more about Sitton and his wife here and here.)

    http://youtu.be/6JBqc29qmkA

    http://youtu.be/6JBqc29qmkA - David Sitton // Propel the Church, Harvest the Nations

    Here's an excerpt from Sitton's talk. . .

    "There are some other important words, like obedience, and responsibility, and obligation. All of these are good words. They have their place as well. But I just feel compelled to focus and to center upon that word privilege. That's the word I want to emphasize. Because God has given us the unspeakable privilege –– oh yeah, it's a responsibility and an obligation. It is that. It is a command. But isn't it, more than anything else a privilege?–– That we get to do this. That we get to go into all of the world with the Gospel. Are you kidding me? We get to do this. We get to go and we get to take territory for the kingdom of God. That's what we get to do, and as we do it, we do it as the army of God. What a privilege! Don't ever forget it! Don't ever take it for granted. It's a privilege."But at the same time, you need to keep this in balance:  we are still in spiritual warfare.  We need a warfare worldview. We need to understand that we are not civilians, Christians. We're not on Christian cruise ships. We are on battleships. And we are going into dangerous territory. Places where Satan has been in control for thousands of years. Do you think he's gonna to let them go easily? Think he's gonna let them go without a fight, without a struggle. He will let them go, but it will through a mighty warfare. And so, we are an army. Everything about us is a picture of being in this army. We are soldiers. We wear armor that soldiers wear. It's spiritual armor.  We fight with spiritual weapons. And we go and win spiritual territory or the Kingdom of God. . . .

    "We're the army of God. We don't fight as the world fights. We don't blow up marathons. [Note:  the Boston Marathon bombing took place earlier that week.] We don't strap bombs on to little children and run them into crowded malls. We don't burn Korans. We don't do any of that physically violent stuff, because people are not our enemies. Muslim are not our enemies. Hindus and Buddhists –– they are not our enemies. We're not after, like some of the Muslim extremists, who go, and their intent is geographical conquest.

    "No, our strategy is different. Our strategy is not killing, but our strategy is dying. That's the warfare of the Spirit. We're not going after geographical strongholds, we're going after spiritual strongholds.

    "These places where Satan - - Here's a name of Satan. Many names in Scripture, here's one of them:  he's called the deceiver of the nations. That's his name. That's who he is, and that's what he does.

    "But we're going into his territory. We're going after him. Hear that language:  that's military language. We're going after him. We're targeting him. We're going after the hearts and the souls of the people for whom Christ dies. We're going after ... lost sheep who are scattered among all of the people groups and languages on the planet. These are the regions, not geographic so much, but spiritual regions.... and we want to win these places for Christ. And we're going after them aggressively. Unapologetically we're going after them.

    "Once again, we don't go as marines with physical strength, but we go as lambs among wolves. And through us, through the Gospel,  Jesus destroys spiritual strongholds. That's how it works. We don't go with strength, we go with weakness. We don't go with killing, we go with dying. Isn't that what Jesus did? He came and He died and He conquered. And now that's what we do."

    * * *

    It's too easy for us to think primarily of missions in terms of those who are sent out. I particularly appreciated the last portion of Sitton's message as he spoke of the need for:
    • Missionary martyrs to go
    • Thousands of intercessory prayer martyrs
    • Thousands of financial martyrs

    In other words, some of us will be called to go, while others will be called to stay –– but as Christians, no matter where we are and no matter what our calling, each and every one of us must remember that we're not civilians, that we are not Christian cruise ships, but rather we are on battleships.

    Or, as John Piper put it, all Christians must be engaged:

    Know this: God's purpose for your life is that you engage in His being known and praised and enjoyed and feared among peoples where He is scarcely, if at all, known at all. He wants you to be engaged.


    You've got three options:

     

    Go

    Send

    or

    Disobey.

     

    That's all.

     

    ~ Source:  John Piper's message based on Psalm 67, "Pursuing the Glory of God in the Gladness in the Nations in God"

    May our God strengthen us to comprehend the width and length and depth and height –– to know the love of Christ which passes all knowledge, that His love might constrain and compel us, so we might no longer live for ourselves, but live for Him who died for us and rose again (to live for Him really is true life, is it not?!), and joyfully respond to our Master's call to be His ambassadors, and to count it a privilege to be engaged in His mission that He be might be known and praised and enjoyed and feared among all the nations. God forbid we bow down to the American dream and gain the whole world, but find our souls languishing and withering as we waste our lives lounging on Christian cruise ships. God be merciful to us sinners, for the sake of Your name! Amen.

     

    Here's the video which David Sitton mentioned in his talk...

    http://youtu.be/FzIkh6qfbRY




    Photo credit: Work found at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gastineau_Channel_with_anchored_cruise_ship_23.JPG / CC BY-SA 3.0.

  • Calvinism & missions? Indeed! Ekballo # 1: TULIP & prayer to the Lord of the harvest

    July 10, 2013 was the 504th anniversary of John Calvin's birth.

    Many Christians are perplexed (understatement!) at how Calvinism / Reformed theology can result in a vibrant engagement in evangelism and missions.

    A brief review... the acronym TULIP is sometimes used as a brief summary of Calvinism/ Reformed theology. I realize there's much more to it than this, but here goes:

    1. TOTAL DEPRAVITY
    2. UNCONDITIONAL ELECTION
    3. LIMITED ATONEMENT
    4. IRRESISTIBLE GRACE
    5. PERSEVERANCE OF THE SAINTS

    (Please see here for more on TULIP.)

    In April, between bronchitis and a sinus infection, I was privileged to attend the Ekballo Midwest Conference in DeKalb, Illinois. The organization To Every Tribe (http://www.toeverytribe.com/) is grounded in Reformed doctrine (see here for more on their vision, mission, distinctives and core values). There are plenty of Christian conferences out there, but this one caught my eye in particular as I noticed that the first conference talk was on prayer. (If you're been reading my blog here, you know that has been something God has laid on my heart over the past few years. (For more about that, please see my posts Naphtali News: the Ministry of the Word & Prayer (the second portion) and Silent Night - Not! ~ "Prayer also will be made for Him continually" ... day and night.)

    The Ekballo Conference was one of the most Christ-centered and God-glorifying gatherings of believers I've ever been a part of; that's why I said I was privileged to be there. The conference name Ekballo is taken from the Greek word for "send out" in Matthew 9:38:

    35  And Jesus went throughout all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom and healing every disease and every affliction. 36  When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. 37  Then he said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; 38  therefore pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest.”

    1544 ekballo ek-bal'-lo from 1537 and 906; to eject (literally or figuratively):--bring forth, cast (forth, out), drive (out), expel, leave, pluck (pull, take, thrust) out, put forth (out), send away (forth, out) ~ from Strong's Concordance.


    Over the next few days, Lord willing, I'm hoping to post the three plenary talks (audio only available) from the conference:

    Scott Anderson -Friday, April 19 - Ekballo Plenary Session 1
    Ekballo: The Essential Nature of Prayer in the Gospel Mission
    http://youtu.be/fuA3p5X32sE

    David Sitton - Saturday, April 20 - Ekballo Plenary Session 2
    Ekballo: Propel the Church, Harvest the Nations

    Dalton Thomas - Saturday, April 20 - Ekballo Plenary Session 3
    Ekballo: Martyrdom and the Eternal Purpose of the Church

    If you are a Christian, I ask that you would make the time to listen to all of these messages. I pray God would give each one of us a holy, glorious ambition for lives –– that we might not settle for and waste our lives on shoddy, cheap ambitions. May God conform us into Jesus' image:  transforming our hearts to that of Jesus' compassionate heart, and transforming our desires to His desires; that we might not be lukewarm and lethargic about the great commission, but rather we might press on to take hold of that for which Christ has taken hold of us, not loitering –– but having a single-eyed passion to press on for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus –– that we might be made willing in the day of His power (Psalm 110:3) and present ourselves to Him as holy sacrifices (Romans 12:1-2), ready to be used however and wherever God desires in His mission of taking the Good News of great joy to all the people groups of the world for the sake of His name ... far as the curse is found ... that ALL the earth might be filled with knowledge of the glory of the LORD as the waters cover the sea ... that ALL the peoples might praise Him! ... According to Joshua Project, there are currently 7,183 unreached groups, with a total of 2.9 billion souls ... So long as Jesus tarries, still there is room at His table, my brothers and sisters –– room for more souls to come and feast along with us on the Lord Jesus Christ!

    Here's Scott Anderson's plenary talk given Friday night, April 19, 2013:  "Ekballo: The Essential Nature of Prayer in the Gospel Mission". (Anderson is the executive director of Desiring God.) This message will give you a little insight into you how those of us of the Reformed ilk pray for missions. (BTW: Anderson included some of the story of Adoniram and Ann Judson; tomorrow (July 13) is the 200th anniversary of their arriving in Burma.)

    http://youtu.be/fuA3p5X32sE

    http://youtu.be/fuA3p5X32sE - Scott Anderson // Ekballo: The Essential Nature of Prayer in the Gospel Mission

     


    Related:

    Romans 12:1-2 ~ Ann Hasseltine Judson: a willing sacrifice – Are you?
    200 years ago ... Adoniram & Ann Judson ~ Don't waste YOUR marriage

    John Piper's biographical message on Adoniram Judson, "How Few There Are Who Die So Hard! Suffering and Success in the Life of Adoniram Judson: The Cost of Bringing Christ to Burma" <http://www.desiringgod.org/resource-library/biographies/how-few-there-are-who-die-so-hard>. Also available in E-Book format here for free: <http://www.desiringgod.org/resource-library/books/adoniram-judson

    Scripture quotations are taken from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. Copyright ©2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

About me...

Christian hedonist in training. Pressing on to know more and more of the joy of the LORD. Pleading with God to rend the heavens and revive and refresh my own soul, as well as His Church, to His praise, honor and glory.

Thank God. He can make men and women in middle life sing again with a joy that has been chastened by a memory of their past failures. ~ Alan Redpath

My other websites

tent of meeting: Prayer for reformation & revival

(See also Zechariah821. Zechariah821 is a mirror site of tent of meeting, found on WordPress)

deerlifetrumpet: Encouragement for those seeking reformation & revival in the Church

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