Check out

Blogs

Student Debt Traps Parents and Kids | Alex Chediak
Some scary stats AND a solution in Alex’s upcoming book, Beating the College Debt Trap: Getting a Degree Without Going Broke.

Semester in Scotland | Gentle Reformation
I’ve heard good things about this program.

The Shepherd Leader | Ref21
An introduction to Timothy Witmer’s new website, The Shepherd Leader. Definitely one to add to your blog reader.

Take a Test on The Trinity | Tim Challies
One to send to the youth group leader.

Reformation Preaching Conference in Kentucky
I’ll be in Elizabethtown, Kentucky for the next few days for the Doctrines of Grace Conference where I hope to give two addresses, one on The Impact of Calvinism on the Culture, and the other An Overview of the Doctrines of Grace. There are quite a number of other speakers with some fascinating subjects.

Kindle Books

Ordinary: How to Turn the World Upside Down by Tony Merida $2.99.

I Will: Nine Traits of the Outwardly Focused Christian by Thom Rainer $2.99

Saving Leonardo: A Call to Resist the Secular Assault on Mind, Morals, and Meaning by Nancy Pearcey $2.99.

New Book(let)

How Should We Develop Biblical Friendship? by Joel Beeke $2.99.

Video

Practical Advice for College Students


The Preacher and His Technology

Technology can be a wonderful servant but a terrible master. Nowhere is that more true than in the area of Christian ministry, especially for the preacher preparing sermons. My aim in this article is to help preachers use technology in such a way as to get the most out of this willing servant, but also to avoid it becoming a damaging tyrant. To do that, we will honestly face some of the dangers of technology in sermon preparation; then we will outline a number of ways technology can help in sermon preparation; finally, I’ll give you a brief description of the primary ways in which I use technology in sermon preparation.

THE DANGERS OF TECHNOLOGY

Distraction

Even someone writing sermons with a quill and parchment can be distracted from his task. However, the time and the effort it takes to get and read another scroll from the vault would usually be sufficient disincentive to distraction. Modern technology, however, makes it much easier to be distracted. We’re just a couple of finger movements and clicks away from Facebook, YouTube, blogs, and so on. It’s so fast, so quick, and so, so easy. And so damaging to deep thought. Thankfully, we can use technology to keep technology under control, by using software like LeechBlock to limit Internet access.

Dependence

When all the early preachers had was a Bible, they had to wrestle with the text and prayerfully seek the help of the Holy Spirit, especially in dealing with difficult passages. With the availability of the Internet and Bible software, it so much easier to ask Google than to ask God. Admittedly, books pose a similar danger, but the ease of Internet searching and the huge capacities of modern Bible software make it all the more tempting than the hard work of prayerfully striving to understand God’s Word in a dependent spirit.

Deception

Digital books and the Internet have made it so fearfully easy to simply cut and paste swathes of text that some preachers are just parroting collations of other men’s sermons and passing it off as their own. This is deception which not only damages the preacher’s relationship with God, but also undercuts his hope of God’s blessing.

Degradation

The more we depend on electronic resources and the more we simply cut and paste, the more we degrade our own thinking abilities. The less thinking we do for ourselves and the more we let others do our thinking for us, the harder and harder it becomes for us to think. Yes, it’s easier just to lazily reach for the commentary or to open Bible software, but we must resist that in order to develop the muscle of our own mind which, like all muscles, gets stronger with use.

Division

In my 13 years of teaching Seminary students, I’ve noticed that students take much less notes in class than they used to. One reason for this is that they think they know where they can find information on the Internet when they need it. However, there’s a big difference between knowing where to find something and knowing something. Also, by taking knowledge into our minds, information on one subject is no longer separated from another subject as it is on the Internet. Instead, the knowledge of different subjects is mingling in our minds, cross-pollinating and fertilizing, and also renewing our minds, and building a godly worldview.

Devotion

Many preachers will concede that there is often a devotional deficit associated with using technology to prepare sermons, compared to writing with pen and paper. I’m not sure why that should be, apart from it just takes longer to write things out and we write more carefully than we type. Somehow, using a computer can make sermon writing a more mechanical and automated process rather than a spiritual and devotional exercise.

Despising

If we’re older, there’s the danger that we’ll despise the use of technology in ministry. If we’re younger, there’s the danger of despising those who don’t use technology much at all. It’s important that we don’t make our preference the rule for others, but find whatever works best for our minds, talents, and methods. Let’s be careful that we don’t let use lead to abuse, or abuse lead to non-use.

THE BENEFITS OF TECHNOLOGY

Affordability

Although some modern Bible software is expensive to buy and some of the books are also quite expensive, on the whole they are good value. If you keep your eye open, you can usually pick up software packages and individual books at significant discounts. There are also websites that offer many free books for Logos. Also, if you use the Kindle App on your computer, you will be able to buy some of the quality Christian books that Amazon offers daily.

Accessibility

With the help of my Mac and my Kindle, I can now carry thousands of books with me wherever I go and access my books even without Internet access. That allows me to prepare sermons in airports, on planes, hotel rooms, etc. Logos also syncs its software with its tablet and smartphone app.

Accuracy

Most Bible software and some online software are regularly updated with the latest morphological, syntactical, and archeological research, lending increased accuracy to our studies. That helps us to avoid relying on dated information that is no longer credible. Remember, the wide availability of Bible software has also made it easier for people to check what we are saying on their smartphones in their pews as they listen to us. That should challenge us to do thorough research!

Efficiency

Technology has the potential to save us hours of time. It is simply much quicker to hover over a word on Logos and get immediate parsing and lexical information than to do this using parsing guides and lexicons. Same goes for counting up how many times a word is used in a chapter, a book, or in the whole Bible. Some software will even present this information in color on pie and bar charts.

Searchability

If I want to study something like justification, I can enter that word on Logos and it will open every resource in my library that refers to justification. It’s like standing in front of a library of hundreds of books, saying “Justification,” and all the books in our library immediately open on our desk at that subject. In addition, I have all my preached sermons filed in Evernote, which allows me to search all my previous sermons for specific words, phrases, or topics.

Linguistic Ability

Although it might be thought that the use of technology for original language study might undermine  a preacher’s ongoing development in Greek and Hebrew, I’ve found the opposite to be the case. Most “purists” who don’t use technology for this, eventually discover their approach is unsustainable in pastoral ministry, and not only give up their idealism but also their Greek and Hebrew. Those who take a more pragmatic approach, using some of the God-given tools to make the task easier, usually find that over the years they are using the technology less as they have absorbed so much Greek and Hebrew through regular exposure to the languages through the technology.

Durability

Technology allows us to extend the life and usefulness of sermons by uploading them to sites like sermonaudio.com. We might also use parts of some sermons as blog posts or take out certain sentences to use as quotations on Twitter or Facebook. I know many ministers who use the Logos notes feature to attach their sermons to specific texts, so that if they are studying them in future, the notes are right there for them to access, again extending their usefulness into the future.

EXAMPLES OF HOW I USE TECHNOLOGY

Although Logos is more expensive than other options, and it’s bulky and frustrating at times, on balance it’s the best option for me. Following are some of the ways I use Logos in weekly sermon preparation (although much of what I write here is also transferrable to other Bible Software programs such as Bibleworks and Accordance).

Delimiting the text

Once I have spent some time working on delimiting my text, I usually check it using the Logos Compare Pericope tool which lets me compare how different Bible versions have decided where the paragraph begins or ends. That can either confirm me in my decision or else challenge me to think further.

Comparing the text

Before beginning to look at the text in Greek or Hebrew, I usually use the Logos Text Comparison tool to study five or six different English versions of the passage, looking for how different versions use different words, tenses, order, missed words, added words, etc. I do this to make my original language study more efficient by focusing my study on the words and phrases where there is some significant disagreement. It’s not that I don’t spend any time studying the words and phrases that are uniformly translated; rather, it helps me know where I have to spend most of my time.

Word Study

Logos allows me to hover over a word, discover its lemma, and then do a number of different kinds of word studies of varying complexity using different tools. Each word study probably takes about 5-10 minutes compared to perhaps an hour of similar study using books and concordances, and produces far more accurate, independent, and comprehensive results.

Grammar and Syntax

Depending on which version of Logos that you use, and which additional books you have bought, you may be able to access Greek and Hebrew grammars that make reference to the specific text you are studying. By looking up these links each time a sermon is prepared, our Greek and Hebrew knowledge will be gradually expanded as well as helping in our immediate sermon preparation.

Annotation

I use the Visual Filters tool on Logos to automatically color code Greek and Hebrew verbs, pronouns, and conjunctions according to my presets. If I choose to see the verbs, Logos puts colored highlights, boxes, and under-linings on each word so that I can immediately see their stems, tenses, voices, etc., and any significant patterns and sequences. I can also add notes to the text as I go on. I will sometimes print out this color coded annotated version of the text in Greek or Hebrew and carry it around with me so that I can familiarize myself with it at various points in the week.

Outline

Logos offers a number of outlining tools from simple block diagramming, to sentence diagramming, to much more complex line diagramming. Although, of course, this can also be done on paper, using technology allows much greater trial and error in trying to decide how words relate to one another. As a check on your work in Greek, you can buy the Lexham Clausal Outlines add-on for Logos.

Cross references

With Logos, it’s easy and quick to bring up a range of cross references relevant to the passage, and also any parallel passages to compare two accounts of the one event.

Commentary

Most Logos packages come with a number of commentaries. Although the quality of them varies, they can be supplemented with a good range of excellent modern commentaries that Logos offers as standalone volumes. And, of course, you can access many commentaries and sermons online. The only thing to emphasize here is to delay this step until as late as possible in the sermon preparation process so that you have struggled with the text yourself before reading commentaries and sermons, so that you don’t just copy what others have said. Wrestling with the text yourself will make your sermons more original, more personal, and more authoritative.

This article was first published in The Expositor Magazine. You can subscribe here.


Check out

Blogs

Why every student should read Martyn Lloyd-Jones ” Southern Seminary Blog: Ben Bailie
“Lloyd-Jones showed me that if your theology can’t be preached, it isn’t good theology.”

Daily Dose of Hebrew
Great resource for learning and keeping up your Hebrew.

No, You Probably Aren’t Called To Be A Pastor | Blogging Theologically: Aaron Armstrong
“It seems like every new believer—particularly the younger men—have a moment in those first couple of years of their faith where they ask, ‘Am I called to be a pastor?’”

Preaching The Proverbs | Nick Batzig
Big batch of resources for anyone wanting to teach or preach from Proverbs.

Ten Commandments for Church Members Regarding Your Pastor | Joel Beeke
And for balance, here are Ten Commandments for Pastors.

Why You Should Make Your Phone Calls All At Once | Time Management Ninja
By scheduling time with your phone each day, you will have time to make those quick calls that otherwise elude you.

Recommended Book

Spurgeon’s Sorrows: Realistic Hope for those who Suffer from Depression by Zack Eswine.

Kindle Books

131 Christians Everyone Should Know by Mark Galli $2.99.

Undone: A Story of Making Peace With an Unexpected Life by Michelle Cushatt $2.99.

The Case for Grace: A Journalist Explores the Evidence of Transformed Lives by Lee Strobel $2.99.

10% Happier: How I Tamed the Voice in My Head, Reduced Stress Without Losing My Edge, and Found Self-Help That Actually Works by Dan Harris $1.99. This is a modern day Ecclesiastes story but without the happy ending in a God-centered and God-glorifying life. Worth reading to remind ourselves of the desperate hollowness of celebrity life and false religion. And its best-selling status tells us how many think they’ll find the answer to their search for happiness in this book.

Video

 If we believe in predestination, why should we evangelize?
Click through for Dr Lane Tipton’s answer.

Lane Tipton

 

 

 


Check out

Blogs

5 “C” Suggestions for Developing Trust as a Leader | Ron Edmondson

5 Foundational Spiritual Disciplines for Biblical Counselors | BCC

Handling Contentions in the Church | Nick Batizig

The Value of a Mentor | Barry York

The Spiritual Gift of Physical Exercise | Trillia Newbell

3 Things Not To Do After You Preach | Dave Harvey

Home Alone: The Lies That Tie us to our Phones and along similar lines iPhones: Silos of the Soul

Recommended New Book

Reclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in a Digital Age by bestselling author Shelley Turkle.

Kindle Books

What’s Best Next: How the Gospel Transforms the Way You Get Things Done by Matt Perman $3.99.

The Dating Manifesto: A Drama-Free Plan for Pursuing Marriage with Purpose by Lisa Anderson $2.99.

Addicted to Busy: Recovery for the Rushed Soul $1.99.

Video

Discipling People With Intellectual Disabilities

At Justin Taylor’s blog, you can find another video interview with Paul Miller about the Bethesda Curriculum – Bible studies for those with intellectual disabilities.


Our Happy Book: Finding Joy in God’s Word

Psalm 119 is one long and exuberant song of delight in God’s Word. Multiple descriptions of God’s Word are punctuated with repeated exultations of joy in God’s Word (Ps. 119:14, 16, 24, 35, 47, 70, 77, 92, 111, 143, 162, 174).

My favorite line is “I rejoice at your word, as one that finds great spoil” (v. 162). I love the imagery of someone who turns a corner one day only to find a huge pile of treasure left behind by a marauding army – and it’s all his. Can you imagine what that would feel like? That’s how we should feel when we open the Bible. So let me suggest a number of ways in which we can experience joy in God’s Word.

We find joy in its existence: Spurgeon said, “This great joy is sometimes aroused by the fact that there is a Word of God.” There is a book in which God reveals himself. What a find! Unless God had revealed himself we could never have known Him.

We find joy in its origin: Compare your response to a letter from your utility company with the great joy of receiving a letter from an absent relative or friend. The origin of the letter determines how much pleasure it gives us. Therefore, when reading the Bible, the more we consciously realize that this is God’s Word to us, that the ultimate author and speaker of these words is God, then the more joy there will be in reading it.

We find joy in its reliability: When our new gadget comes with patchy instructions written in poor English, it’s not very inspiring is it? The unreliability of the words make us question the reliability of the gadget. But when we read the Bible, it’s an immense joy to know that this book in our hand is unlike any other publication in the world. It is 100% truth. The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

We find joy in its authority: In a world so full of conflicting opinions, ideas, and ethics; in a world where everyone is right and no one is wrong; in a world where everyone does what is right in their own eyes; in a world where the most solid words are “I think…”; in such a world, it’s a joy to have God’s Word come to us with ethical authority in its “Thus-saith the Lord,” with its thou-shalts and thou-shalt-nots, and with its verily-verilys. Its certainty sweeps away all the doubts and questions.

We find joy in its clarity: Ever picked up a book and been totally frustrated at being unable to understand any or much of it? What a misery! Not so with the Bible. Although “All things in Scripture are not alike plain in themselves, nor alike clear unto all: yet those things which are necessary to be known, believed, and observed for salvation are so clearly propounded, and opened in some place of Scripture or other, that not only the learned, but the unlearned, in a due use of the ordinary means, may attain unto a sufficient understanding of them.” (Westminster Confession 1.7).

We find joy in its sufficiency: Although we might sometimes wish the Bible was bigger, or more detailed and specific in some areas than others, God has given us enough inspired Scripture to know Him and know what to believe about Him and do in response to who He is. Our faith and duty is either expressly set forth or may be deduced from it. It lacks nothing essential to our faith and life.

We find joy in its teaching: The Christian brain especially loves to learn and the Word of God is an endless source of learning. We will never come to the point where we can say “I know it all now.” Not the most learned professor nor the most mature Christian in the world will ever exhaust its riches or plumb all its depths. And yet it’s so suitable to teach children also. As someone said it’s shallow enough for a child to paddle in and deep enough to challenge the biggest elephant.

We find joy in its grace: There could be no joy if this was a book of mere law of do’s, don’ts, guilt, condemnation, and judgment. But finding its pages packed full of grace for the guilty and mercy for the miserable, we find great joy. Many of us can take you to a text or passage that God used to open our eyes and give us new life. What laughter fills our hearts and mouths when we read the words that God used to bring us alive from the dead, to open our eyes to the beauty of Christ.

We find joy in its cleansing: It’s so good to come home to a refreshing shower if we’ve been working in a dirty yard or workshop. What an exhilarating feeling to step out of the shower and feel clean again. Similarly, as we read God’s Word it cleanses us from the filth of this world and of our own hearts (Eph 5:22).

We find joy in its strength: Sometimes we’ve faced difficulties in life and thought about giving up. Then God’s Word has spoken into our lives and given us renewed energy, motivation, drive, and enthusiasm. We are given mental strength, spiritual strength, emotional strength, and even physical strength. We are strengthened to face difficulties, to serve, and to suffer (Ps. 119:50).

We find joy in its guidance: So many times we have wondered what we should do, where we should turn, and the Word of God has made the decision clear. What joy when the fog lifts and the way ahead is obvious!

We find joy in its warnings: We are all thankful for warning signs on the road, to slow us down lest we fly off at a dangerous bend. Similarly, God’s warnings about hell should be a joy to us as they serve to keep us from danger and motivate us to show others the warnings too. We don’t resent them but gratefully receive them from the God who knows far better than we do what is good for us.

We find joy in its promises: Spurgeon said, “It is a good thing to mark your Bibles when you have received a promise. Mark the margin with T and P, and let it stand for ‘tried and proved.’

We find joy in its suitability: It’s a constant wonder that God’s Word is so suitable to so many different people in so many different places at so many different times in so many different circumstances. As a pastor, I’m continually amazed by how the Bible speaks to every situation in our culture. It is so real and so relevant.

We find joy in its communion: Unlike any other book, as we read God’s Word, we actually enter into communion with its author, we enter into communion with God through Christ by the Holy Spirit. As we read its pages the triune God comes out of the book and into our hearts.

We find joy in its unity: One of the greatest pleasures in reading God’s Word is to see how each Testament fits the other, how earlier books shed light on later books and vice versa, and how it all fits together as part of one great and grand plan of redemption.

We find joy in its hope: The Bible is full of anticipation of a brighter and better future, holding out before us the prospect of the new heavens and the new earth in which dwells righteousness. It’s like reading a travel brochure to the world’s greatest destinations, and knowing that you are going to all of them at once.

We find joy in its songs: God’s songs in the book of Psalms have been a delight to many Christians’ souls throughout the centuries and up to this day. They thrill our hearts and soar our souls heavenwards.

We find joy in its balance: Although the Bible warns us against worldliness, it also encourages a love for this world. The worldliness that it warns us against is accepting and following the norms, the values, the philosophies, and sins of this world. But it also encourages us to value, cherish, care for, and enjoy this world, meaning this physical world that God created and still sustains.

We find joy in its worldview: The Bible gives us a lens to view the world, a framework with which to understand this world, its history, its present, and its future.

We find joy in its freshness: How many times we’ve come to read a portion of God’s Word and it comes alive so that it feels like we’ve never read it before. The old becomes new, the old story comes with new power.

No wonder David exclaimed: I rejoice at your word, as one that finds great spoil.


Check out

Blogs

How I Work: An Interview with Trevin Wax | TGC
See if you can pick up a tip or two from this hyper-productive creative.

Is Agape a Mystical Magical Word that Means God’s Sacrificial Gracious Love? | Pyromaniacs
“We know about God’s love, not by reading a study bible or a word-study or a lexicon, but by studying passages using and illustrating the term’s meaning, such as Romans 5:6-8 or Ephesians 2:4.”

Four Convictions for Boldness from John Knox | GCD
Part of the Family History series: “We want to connect the church’s current efforts to make, mature, and multiply disciples to its historical roots as well as encourage the church to learn from her rich past.”

How to be a Gentleman Scholar: Classroom Etiquette for the College Man
“First, classroom etiquette facilitates a positive and constructive learning environment for everyone — you, your classmates, and your professor. Second, practicing good manners in the classroom is a good way of practicing the manners and social skills necessary to thrive as an adult and as a professional in the working world. In short, good etiquette in college can help you make the most out of your education.”

The Bait and Switch of Same-Sex Marriage | Desiring God
With many magistrates refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples and many country clerks and justices of the peace resigning their positions, Nancy Peacrcey asks, “Is it going to become impossible for a Christian to hold public office in America?”

The Eight Kinds of Commenters in the Christian Blogosphere | First Things
Thankful that I don’t have any of these here at HeadHeartHand.

Kindle Books

The End of Reason: A Response to the New Atheists by Ravi Zacarias $1.99.

Running on Empty: The Gospel for Women in Ministry by Barbara Bancroft $1.99.

Reformed Means Missional: Following Jesus into the World by Sam Logan $2.51.

New Book

Redemption Accomplished and Applied by John Murray $9.99. New edition of a theological classic with a foreword by Carl Trueman. No Christian’s library is complete without this book. One of those books that should be read every year.

Video

The Foundations Conference
sermonaudio.com are hosting a conference in Kings College, New York from 15-17 December 2015. Speakers include Steve Lawson, Conrad Mbewe, and Joel Beeke. More details here. You might want to turn down your volume before watching this video.