Two Parts of Gospel Communication

“Christianity is enshrined in the life: but it is proclaimed by the lips. If there is a failure in either respect the gospel cannot be communicated” (Michael Green, Evangelism in the Early Church, 194).

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One of my pastors back in Indiana use to say, “You need to wear your theology.” In the quote above, Michael Green is saying the same thing. There are two parts to Gospel Communication: 1) Life and life-style and works — aka, one’s agenda/what you do, and 2) the words and speech that dance on your lips — aka, one’s creed and confession/what you proclaim. That is, you need to wear/live what you believe (your theology). Therefore, Gospel Communication consists of two parts, and the twain ought not to be separated.

Guide and Tone for Prayer

“God must be the guide of your desires, and the ground of your expectations in prayer. . . . Keep your voice in tune for prayer, and let all your language be a pure language, that you may be fit to call on the name of the Lord, Zeph. iii. 9 (From Directions for Daily Communion with God by Matthew Henry).

Matthew Henry on Prayer and Business, and Their Relation

“Let not any other business hinder our saying what we have to say to God. We have business with a friend, perhaps, but we cannot do it, because we have not leisure; we have something else to do, which we think more needful; but we cannot say so concerning the business we have to do with God; for that is without doubt the one thing needful, to which every thing else must be made to truckle and give way. It is not at all necessary to our happiness that we be great in the world, or raise estates to such a pitch. But it absolutely necessary that we make our peace with God, that we obtain his favour, and keep ourselves in his love. Therefore no business for the world will serve to excuse our attendance upon God; but, on the contrary, the more important our worldly business is, the more need we have to apply ourselves to God by prayer for his blessing upon it, and so take him along with us in it. The closer we keep to prayer, and to God in prayer, the more will all our affairs prosper” (from Directions for Daily Communion with God).

Eucharistic Model, Again

Thomas J. Davis quoting Martin Luther: “Now this is the fruit, that even as we have eaten and drunk, and say the same words to our neighbor, Take, eat, and drink . . . meaning to offer yourself with all your life, even as Christ did with all that he had” (This Is My Body: The Presence of Christ in Reformation Thought, 56).

Do Not Tithe Your Children

“The first and basic premise of paganism, socialism, and Molech worship is its claim that the state owns the child. The basic premise of the public schools is this claim of ownership, a fact some parents are encountering in the courts. It is the essence of paganism to claim first the lives of the children, then the properties of the people.” (Excerpt from reprint from R. J. Rushdoony’s The Roots of Reconstruction, 9-10.)
 

Social Collateral: A Great and Power Thing

Here is a thoughtful article by Peter Leithart; he is commenting on Iron Curtain: The Crushing of Eastern Europe, 1944-1956, and his closing thoughts are quite compelling: social collateral (the matrix and benefits created by social institutions) is greater and more powerful than raw free enterprise (the market).

Leithart says that the former, not the latter, serves as a better bulwark to tyranny. Surely, for some, this is a controversial statement.

The Shorter Catechism: Q.1

The answer to the first question (“What is the chief end of man?”) from The Shorter Catechism is the paradigmatic compound sentence, “Man’s chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy him forever.”

This “chief end” is the design at back the master narrative of humanity. As A. W. Tozer said, “God formed us for himself. . . . God formed us for His pleasure, and so formed us that we as well as He can in divine communion enjoy the sweet and mysterious mingling of kindred personalities. He meant us to see Him and live with Him and draw our life from His smile” (see The Pursuit of God, Chapter 3).

Put on Christ

“[W]e are repeatedly told to “put on Christ” or to “clothe” ourselves with Christ. This is the costume of our new character. Instead of the fig leaves that, as children of Adam and Eve, we used to cover up our shame, God has provided the sacrificial clothing of Jesus Christ and his perfect righteousness, foreshadowed when he clothed Adam and Eve” (Michael Horton, A Better Way: Rediscovering the Drama of God-Centered Worship, 56).