A Flooded World (Video)

Here’s the video to show your kids at the end of Expedition Three of Exploring the BibleIf you want to bookmark a page where all the videos will eventually appear, you can find them on my blog, on YouTube, or the Facebook page for Exploring the Bible.

If you haven’t started your kids on the book yet, you can begin anytime and use it with any Bible version.

You can get it at RHBWestminster BooksCrossway, or Amazon. Some of these retailers have good discounts for bulk purchases by churches and schools.


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Blogs

Opioid Crisis Hits Home
“Drug overdoses killed more than half a million Americans from 2000 to 2015, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).”

If church leaders are looking for some practical help with this problem, here’s a new Practical Tool Kit for Faith-Based Leaders

Weariness is Part of the Job
Helpful distinction between burnout and weariness.

“Are you tired today? Do you feel worn-out? That’s OK. It is normal. Don’t throw in the towel. Don’t give up. Ministry is supposed to make you weary, but you can make it. Don’t quit. Press on. The work is worth the weariness and our God is of far greater worth than the cost of serving him.”

To Phone or Not to Phone—and When?
Eric Geiger thinks through the questions to consider when deciding if/when to give your teen a phone.

Everyone Wants to Be More Productive
Ligonier Connect and Tim Challies have launched an interactive video course that provides a practical and distinctly Christian approach to productivity.

New Accelerated Degree Program in Partnership with Several Respected Seminaries
And just in case you had any doubt that there was life after RC for Ligonier….

My Indebtedness to the Puritans – Meet the Puritans
Did you know that Joel Beeke likes the Puritans?

“While there are many ways that the Bible-saturated books of the Puritans have influenced me, I would like to highlight three special lessons I have learned from them about experiential, practical Christian living.”

Health Workers Who Oppose Abortion Get New Protections
Good news for Christians in healthcare.

“The Trump administration announced on Thursday that it was taking new steps to protect doctors, nurses and other health workers who have religious or moral objections to performing abortions or sex-change operations, or providing other medical services. The move, one day before the annual March for Life in Washington, was a priority for anti-abortion groups.”

Workplace Trial: How One Executive Led During Dual Tragedies
Fascinating story about how a successful Christian businessman navigated some huge workplace challenges.

Kindle Books

If you’re into history, there are multiple history books on sale at Amazon.


The Best Preacher in the World

Every church needs two preachers. We need a human preacher, one who is visible, audible, tangible. But we also need a divine preacher, one that is invisible, inaudible, and intangible. I’m speaking of the Holy Spirit, without whom the work of the human preacher is in vain.

A Personal Preacher
How can I call the Holy Spirit ‘a preacher’? In various places the Holy Spirit is called the parakletos (eg. John 14:16). There isn’t really a comparable English word to translate this, leading to varied inadequate translations such as ‘comforter,’ ‘helper,’ or ‘Advocate.’ The literal translation is something like ‘one who comes alongside to call with words.’ Do you see how I can call the Holy Spirit a preacher? He comes alongside Christians and calls them, or exhorts them, with words.

He is very personal preacher, not only in that he is a person rather than a force or power – a real HE coming to a real you – but also because his pulpit is your own heart. He lives within the Christian and preaches to him with God’s words, preaching so personally and intimately as if he was the only one in his congregation.

A Pure Preacher
Every preacher has his flaws, and eventually the congregation will see them. That’s why visiting preachers often seem much better than our own pastor. It’s because we don’t know them and their flaws in the same way as we know our own pastor. But the Holy Spirit is different, primarily because he is the HOLY Spirit. As such, he is flawless and faultless.

He’s also pure in the sense of having the purest of motives. The entertainer is after your applause, the politician is after your vote, the attorney is after your verdict, the financier is after your money, the advertiser is after your eyeballs, but the Holy Spirit is after the good of your soul. He is pure in his effect as well, the result of his work in the Christian being a holier spirit.

A Present Preacher
When the Pope visited the USA a few years ago, one media commentator said, “Isn’t it wonderful that the vicar of Christ has visited the USA!” The ‘vicar of Christ’ means the stand-in, or spokesman, for Christ, and is one of the titles the Pope takes to himself. Well I’ve got news for you, the vicar of Christ visits the USA every day! That’s because the true vicar of Christ is the Holy Spirit, not the pope of Rome.

When Jesus was leaving his disciples he said, that he would send the Holy Spirit as his vicar, as his stand-in, someone who would stay with his disciples forever (John 14:16). That’s why the martyr Ignatius sometimes called himself Theophorus (literally, ‘God-carrier’), explaining to his hearers, “I bear about with me the Holy Spirit.”

Sometimes, Sunday sermons make a great impression on us, but it wears off by Monday morning, and we mourn, “If only I could have the preacher beside me every day to motivate and drive me on.” Well you can, because the Holy Spirit is your ever-present preacher.

A Perfect Preacher
When we looked at the Holy Spirit as a pure preacher, we were speaking of his character. Now let’s look at his perfect gifts and talents. Unlike the best human preacher, he has perfect knowledge of Scripture. As the Spirit of Truth, he knows it all, understands it all, and can apply it all perfectly. He has perfect knowledge of you, your character, your providence, your circumstances. He knows exactly how to fit the Word to you. He can even take sermons that seem irrelevant and make them applicable to you if you ask him.

A Patient Preacher
Many preachers go through seasons of discouragement. They get weary, cynical, self-pitying, and, sometimes, in frustration with their listeners, even lose their tempers. The Holy Spirit doesn’t fall into these traps. He comes to you again, and again, and again. Patiently calling, pleading, exhorting, directing. For the Christian, thankfully, he doesn’t give up but returns even after being ignored or deliberately rejected.

A Powerful Preacher
One common English translation of parakletos is ‘Comforter.’ That’s derived from two Latin words and means ‘with strength.’ The Holy Spirit comes with power. He strengthens the weak through speaking God’s Word. He takes the weakest human sermons and transforms them into almighty words.

When the disciples heard that Jesus was leaving them, they were discouraged. They felt weak and impoverished. But Jesus told them that, on the contrary, they are about to be enriched and strengthened by the empowering work of the Holy Spirit. What an encouragement to pastors when facing desperately difficult and even impossible situations. We are weak and our words are weak. But there’s another preacher with us who is omnipotent.

A Particular Preacher
The Holy Spirit is very particular and discriminating in his preaching. He doesn’t have the same message for everybody. Immediately after being promised the Holy Spirit, Jesus informed the disciples that the world cannot receive the Holy Spirit because it neither sees him nor knows him (John 14:17). While the primary preaching work of the Holy Spirit in believers is comfort, in the unbeliever it is conviction. “When he has come, he will convict the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment” (Jn. 16:8). He strengthens and comforts believers; he weakens and discomforts unbelievers. But he does so in order to make unbelievers seek his strength and comfort.

So, yes, pray for your human preacher—he needs it. But also pray for more of the divine preacher—you need him.


Tempering Truth with Love

GraciousnessAn excerpt from Graciousness: Tempering Truth with Love by John Crotts.

Sometimes we have some important things to say to our Christian brothers and sisters, but the way we say it directly affects the way they receive our message. Sharing your message with harshness, a critical spirit, a condescending attitude, anger, or even a scowl is like communicating wonderful things with terribly bad breath. The person you are talking to could completely miss out on the benefits of your message simply because of the way you deliver it.

God cares about more than just the words you say. He also cares about how you say those words. It is not enough always to say the truth; you must also say the truth in love. The Lord Jesus Christ provides the greatest model of a per- son with zeal both to know and to apply the truth of God. Although He knew the truth better than anyone who ever lived, He was never guilty of selfishly showing of His understanding of the Scriptures. While He used the Word of God to correct and admonish others who needed it, His necessary corrections came accompanied with virtues such as love, gentleness, and kindness. These virtues can be summarized as graciousness. The apostle John describes Jesus as “full of grace and truth” (John 1:14). For zealous Christians to faithfully follow their Lord, they must pursue God’s truth in their minds and practice, but they must also intentionally cultivate graciousness in their hearts and lives.

Graciousness: Tempering Truth with Love by John Crotts.


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Blogs

What Are the Most Churched (and Unchurched) Cities in America?
Is your city on any of these lists?

Have Bible Quoters Replaced Bible Readers?
“I’ve never really known how to identify the scope of the biblical illiteracy facing us until I read this past weekend a sentence that perfectly articulated what I had noticed, in David Nienhuis’ very helpful new book A Concise Guide to Reading the New Testament (Baker). Speaking of the students in his college New Testament classes, Nienhuis writes that they struggle with the biblical material “because they have been trained to be Bible quoters, not Bible readers.”

Why I’ve Spent Half My Life Helping North Korea
“North Koreans are real human beings who are trying to love their families well. They’re trying to raise their kids. They’re trying to be healthy. They suffer just like we do. They long for better relationships with the outside world, with us as “the enemy.” They want to know who we are and why we think the way we do….It’s a very complex situation, but I think the Bible is very clear: We are called to actively love our enemies. When we do, God enters into that space and brings healing, understanding, righteousness, and justice. So we’re called to engage. We’re called to reach out. We’re called to remember that these are our brothers and sisters.”

3 Downsides of Thinking You Are Better Than You Are
“Most speakers think they are better speakers than they actually are. Most leaders think they are better leaders than reality says they are. And most professional football players, according to John Madden, think they are better than they actually are.”

My Writing Process, Advice for Aspiring Authors
From Randy Alcorn, author of over 50 books.

Free Ebook: ‘The Case for Life’
“Fill out a brief survey on your Bible reading habits to download a free digital copy of The Case for Life: Equipping Christians to Engage the Culture today.”

Kindle Books

For your non-Kindle book buying needs please consider using Reformation Heritage Books in the USA and Reformed Book Services in Canada. Good value prices and shipping.

Some excellent commentaries available here for $5.99 and $6.99. I almost always consult this series in my sermon prep.

What’s in the Bible: A One-Volume Guidebook to God’s Word by R.C. Sproul and Robert Wolgemuth $1.99.

Enthroned on Our Praise: An Old Testament Theology of Worship  by Timothy M. Pierce $2.99.

50 People Every Christian Should Know: Learning from Spiritual Giants of the Faith by Warren W. Wiersbe $1.99.


A Surprising Puritan Apologist

Ever thought of Matthew Henry as an apologist? No, neither had I until I came across the last book he sent to the printers just twenty-three days before he died in 1714.

The book is entitled The Pleasantness of a Religious Life: Opened and proved; and recommended to the consideration of all; particularly of young people. It comprises the last six sermons in his two-year apologetic series on the Reasonableness of the Christian Religion and was based upon Proverbs 3:17, “Her [Wisdom's] ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace.”

Henry’s apologetic passion is not only clear in its title but also in the preface to the book, where he states that “the Pleasantness of Religion is what I have long had a particular kindness for, and have taken all occasions to mention.” In other words, it was his favorite and most frequent subject. When you read his commentary with this knowledge, you see his arguments for the reasonableness and pleasantness of the Christian life everywhere.

After asserting that “Nothing draws more forcibly than pleasure,” he explained his apologetic motive in writing:

In order, therefore, to the advancing of the interests of the divine life in myself and others, I have here endeavored, as God has enabled me, to make it evident, that the Pleasures of the Divine Life are unspeakably better, and more deserving than those of the animal life: were people convinced of this, we should gain our point.

A brief exegesis of Proverbs 3:17 is followed by Henry’s own summary of what it teaches: The doctrine, therefore, contained in these words, is, that true piety has true pleasure in it. Or thus; the ways of religion are pleasant and peaceful ways.

His apologetic strategy is further demonstrated in the chapter titles, with three chapters dedicated to proving the truth in different ways (Chapters II-IV), and one to defending the truth from objections (Chapter VI) as can be seen from the table of contents:

Chapter I. The Explication of the Doctrine.

Chapter II. The Pleasure of being Religious, proved from the Nature of True Religion, and many particular Instances of it.

Chapter III. The Pleasantness of Religion proved from the Provision that is made, for the Comforts of those that are Religious, and the Privileges they are entitled to.

Chapter IV. The Doctrine further proved by Experience.

Chapter V. The Doctrine illustrated by the Similitude used in the Text, of a Pleasant Way or Journey.

Chapter VI. The Doctrine vindicated from what may be objected against it.

Chapter VII. The Application of the Doctrine.

You can buy a modern edition of this work with a foreword by J. I. Packer, or you can read the online text here. It’s a good example from a surprising source of the kind of needs-based or experiential apologetics that we’ve been exploring the last week or so. It’s not perfect, but it’s a helpful model to learn from and adjust to our own day and its own great needs, needs that the Christian faith alone can satisfy.


Previous articles in this series

What is Apologetics?
The Two Primary Aims of Apologetics
Experiential Apologetics
The Most Common Apologetic in the Bible?
A Brief History of Needs-Based Apo0logetics