My (77-year-old) Dad Just Started a Blog!

My Dad just became a blogger! Aged 77!! I think you could call him a late adopter. He was 47-years-old before he sensed God’s call to the ministry and started three years of Seminary (after working for 25 years as a dentist). So, I’m guessing he’ll probably join Facebook when he’s about 99.

Seriously though, I couldn’t have had a better Dad, and I’m delighted he’s doing this after retiring from 25 years of faithful pastoring. It’s a great way for him to keep his mind sharp and to share some of what God has taught him over many years of consistent Christian living. If you click on over to RightWithGod.net, you’ll find that everything he writes is thoughtful, careful, and rooted in his love of Scripture. He’s always had a beautiful passion for communicating profound truths simply and accessibly, which I’m sure you’ll appreciate. Why not leave him a comment to encourage him? Here are some of his early articles:


Check Out

Blogs

Scandal: U.S. Christian Groups Prioritize Muslim Refugees over Christian Ones. Here’s Why | Faith McDonnel, The Stream
“Their plight involves a nightmarish catch-22. When Christians flee as refugees they cannot go to UN-run refugee camps because there they face the same persecution and terror from which they fled. If they are not in the refugee camps they are not included in the application process for asylum.”

20 Principles for How Christians Should Relate to Muslims (John Piper Summary) | Justin Taylor, TGC
Justin points us to John Piper’s post-9/11 paper (as timely as ever) on relating to other religions.

What Phubbing Does to Your Relationships | Kyle Jaeger, attn:
“Phubbing” = Phone Snubbing

Don’t Follow Your Heart (New Book) | Jon Bloom, Desiring God
“This creed can sound so simple and beautiful and liberating. It’s a tempting gospel to believe. Until you consider that your heart has sociopathic tendencies.”

Shepherding Women: What Boundaries Must Be Maintained? | Thabiti and Kristie Anyabwile, The Front Porch
Podcast discussion.

The Good Unwanted Gift of Singleness | Katelynn Luedke, Desiring God

PCA Pastors, Remember Your Vows | MOS – Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals
And all other pastors too.

New Book

A Christian’s Pocket Guide to Sin: The Disease and Its Cure by Iain D. Campbell ($7.99).

Kindle Deals

Simplify by Joshua Becker ($0.99)

10-Minute Digital Declutter: The Simple Habit to Eliminate Technology Overload by S. J. Scott and Barrie Davenport ($0.99)

American Wife: A Memoir of Love, War, Faith, and Renewal by Taya Kyle with Jim DeFelice ($1.99)

The End of Jobs: Money, Meaning and Freedom Without the 9-to-5 by Taylor Pearson ($0.99 until November 20). This one’s for my entrepreneur friends.

Video

JetPack Aviation
Now this brings out the inner teen in me. “Unlike other jetpack prototypes, the JB-9 is powered by a real jet engine and is capable of a vertical take-off and landing. According to the designers, the ultimate goal is to create a jetpack that can launch a pilot thousands of feet in the air within a matter of seconds. Though the JB-9 is still in the testing phase, work has already begun on the JB-10. JetPack Aviation promises that its next version will lift the pilot 10,000 feet in the air and travel at 100 mph.”


Gone Fishin’ – A Forgotten Model of Pastoral Ministry

What is a minister of the Gospel like? The most common answers include models like Shepherd, Servant, Preacher, Theologian, Teacher, Counselor, Leader, and so on.

But one model that’s rarely thought about or spoken about today is the first model that Jesus used – Fisherman (Matt. 4:19).

My favorite hobby probably biases me here, but I believe fishing for souls is one of the most powerful models of Christian ministry and must be re-prioritized. It’s such a perfect metaphor for both the fish (sinners) and the fishermen (pastors/witnesses) that I’ll leave you to make the obvious applications.

THE FISH

Fish love water: They are comfortable there, have no desire to leave it, and will stay there even if the water is polluted and is killing them.

Fish are suspicious: They are wary, sensitive, fearful, easily spooked, and spend their life hiding.

Fish fight: They fight with passion when caught, even after being caught, and even with their last breath.

Fish are frustrating: They are unpredictable, annoying, baffling, frustrating, and discouraging.

Fish are worth catching: But when caught, what satisfaction, what enjoyment, what memories, what tales!

THE FISHERMEN

Passionate: He loves fish and loves to catch fish. It’s all his one-track mind thinks about.

Optimistic: He goes out expecting to catch and confident of catching no matter how misplaced his confidence seems to others (especially his wife).

Opportunistic: He looks for every little window of opportunity to get to the river or the lake. He keeps his tackle handy so that every time he passes a stretch of water that looks promising he can take the chance.

Equipped: He has a good, large, and strong net with no holes in it.

Skillful: He acquires many different skills and learns many different techniques and tactics

Sensitive: He has a sixth sense, an inexplicable feeling about just when and where the fish are about to bite. This is not about intelligence or education – it’s usually the result of long years of experience.

Sacrificial: He gives up time and money to fish. He gets up early and stays out late. He invests in equipment and training

Courageous: Sometimes he has to go into difficult and dangerous places to catch the biggest fish.

Patient: He spends time casting, casting, casting, even when the fish keep swimming away.

Persevering: He goes back time and again, even when he’s failed many times before, even when everyone tells him it’s useless.

Prayerful: He knows that only God can put fish in his net.

Happy: He enjoys fishing even when he doesn’t catch anything. It refreshes and energizes him (John 4:32).

Successful: When he’s successful, lot’s of people ask him “What did you use?” “What did you do?” He’s happy to share his secret, because it is no secret. “I follow the Master Fisherman (Matthew 4:19). I stay close to Him, watch Him, imitate Him, love Him, and obey Him.”

Extracted from The Christian Ministry by David Murray, $0.99.


Check out

Blogs

Some preaching-realted posts

How Spurgeon, Edwards and MLJ Structured Their Sermons. | Scribblepreach.com

Paige Patterson: How I Preach | Homiletix 

The Essential Marks of a Preacher by Jason Allen | Reformed Theology Articles at Ligonier.org

Pastor and Scholar? History Says Yes | TGC
Interview with Ligon Duncan about how he has balanced his different responsibilities.

And some further articles on the ISIS threat starting with two different emphasis from Ed Stetzer and Kevin DeYoung.

Immigration Policy Must be Based on More than an Appeal to Compassion | Kevin DeYoung

Love the Refugee With the Compassion Christ Has Shown You | The Exchange | Ed Stetzer

Should We Pray For ISIS to Be Defeated or Converted? | Russell Moore

And on the subject of prayer here’s Derek Thomas with a 5-Step Strategy to God-Centered Prayer.

New Book

The Songs of Jesus: A Year of Daily Devotions in the Psalms by Tim Keller $10.99.

Kindle Books

Theology in the Context of World Christianity: How the Global Church Is Influencing the Way We Think about and Discuss Theology $4.99.

Daniel: Trusting the True Hero by Sean Michael Lewis $2.99.

Comeback Churches by Ed Stetzer

Video

For the more romantically inclined here’s a neat video about the Lord’s leading of Nancy Leigh DeMoss into an unexpected marriage to Robert Wolgemuth. And if you go here, you can find a link to a video of last week’s wedding.


What ISIS Really Wants

What ISIS Really Wants is a superb article at The Atlantic website on the origins and ideology of ISIS. Contrary to what John Kerry said yesterday, about ISIS being a bunch of psychopaths and that their attacks are an assault on reason, this expert says that “The Islamic State is no mere collection of psychopaths. It is a religious group with carefully considered beliefs, among them that it is a key agent of the coming apocalypse. Here’s what that means for its strategy—and for how to stop it…”

Here’s how the article opens:

What is the Islamic State?

Where did it come from, and what are its intentions? The simplicity of these questions can be deceiving, and few Western leaders seem to know the answers. In December, The New York Times published confidential comments by Major General Michael K. Nagata, the Special Operations commander for the United States in the Middle East, admitting that he had hardly begun figuring out the Islamic State’s appeal. “We have not defeated the idea,” he said. “We do not even understand the idea.” In the past year, President Obama has referred to the Islamic State, variously, as “not Islamic” and as al-Qaeda’s “jayvee team,” statements that reflected confusion about the group, and may have contributed to significant strategic errors.

A key paragraph in the middle of the article warns:

But pretending that it isn’t actually a religious, millenarian group, with theology that must be understood to be combatted, has already led the United States to underestimate it and back foolish schemes to counter it. We’ll need to get acquainted with the Islamic State’s intellectual genealogy if we are to react in a way that will not strengthen it, but instead help it self-immolate in its own excessive zeal.

Let’s hope and pray that our reality-denying leaders will get real about this threat real soon, identify it for what it is, name it, understand it, and develop a real response that will do real damage to both its ideology and its vile practices.


Check out

Blogs

5 Words That Weaken Every Sermon | For The Church

A Call for Christian Extremists | Tim Challies

Simple Praying for Complex Times | Gentle Reformation

Being Pro-Life Has Never Been Easy | Christianitytoday.com

Bits and Pieces for Young Ministers: Discipleship, Rest and Reading | Thabiti

Christian Belief Cost Kelvin Cochran His Job | WSJ

Five truths for navigating our First Amendment crisis | Joel J. Miller

This 1897 Text Gives 3 Clues Why Today’s Students Can’t Write | Intellectual Takeout

New Book

God’s Servant Job: A Poem with a Promise by Douglas Bond

Kindle Books

We Believe: Creeds, Confessions, & Catechisms for Worship by Matthew Sims $2.99

Puritan Evangelism by Joel Beeke $0.99

Martin Luther: A Guided Tour of His Life and Thought by Stephen Nichols $1.99.

To the Glory of God: A 40-Day Devotional on the Book of Romans by James Montgomery Boice $3.99.

Video

John Macarthur on the Islamic Threat