Latest notes (download here). Background explanation here. For previous notes click on “Bible Reading Plan” tag at the end of this post.
Latest notes (download here). Background explanation here. For previous notes click on “Bible Reading Plan” tag at the end of this post.
“But, Mom, you don’t know how hard it is to be a Christian today.” “O Dad, things were much simpler in your day.”
Every generation of Christians thinks it is more difficult to be a Christian in their day than in the past. Well, we now have The New York Times on our side.“There is research that shows people still have the same self-control as in decades past, but we are bombarded more and more with temptations,” said Kathleen Vohs, associate professor of marketing at the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota. “Our psychological system is not set up to deal with all the potential immediate gratification.”
The author of the article, Alina Tugend, points out that although temptation is nothing new, since the Industrial Revolution we not only have increased opportunities and time on our hands, but with almost everything available at a click the physical barriers to temptation have almost disappeared. Tugend asks, “Is there anything we can do about it. Are there ways to build up willpower?” Her answer: “Yes.” How? Here’s her method summarized:
1. Define terms. Unless we understand the process of temptation, we will not be able to resist it. Self-control has two components: will-power (moving from the current place to where you want to go) and assessment (measuring to see how well we’re doing).
2. Build up reserves of will-power. Research has shown that willpower, like a muscle, can get fatigued if overused.Two groups were told to watch a funny film without laughing. Then they were asked to resist chocolate chip cookies. Those who succeeded in the first task were more likely to fail in the second.
The conclusion was that those who had to exert more willpower in the first task “exhausted their self-regulatory strength, at least temporarily, and therefore are unable to muster the self-regulation needed for the second task,” Professor Pychyl said.
That’s why the couch is more appealing than the exercise bike after a stressful day at work.
3. Use external controls. If you feel you check your e-mail too frequently, install a program to shut it down temporarily. An extreme example in literature, Professor Pychyl said, was Odysseus asking his men to tie him to the mast to avoid his being lured by the Sirens’ singing.
4. See self-control as fun, not work. In experiments where instructions used the word “fun,” even those with low self-control exerted more willpower than expected.
5. Don’t underestimate the difficulty. This seems to jar a bit with (5), but trying to convince ourselves that self-control is easy won’t work, says Professor Pychl.
6. Be aware of societal pressures. As many temptations result from what everyone else is doing, it may be necessary to shield yourself from such pressure or at least identify it as an external danger.
7. Take small steps. Rather than swearing you’ll stop spending or turn off that computer forever, simply make a choice not to buy a latte today, or to stop checking your computer for an hour, or a day (depending on your addiction).
8. Take a long-term view of temptation. Realize that “those temptations will always be there and you don’t need to act on them now. Knowing that lessens the urgency, has a calming effect, and helps us resist the constant thrum of “buy it now” that permeates our lives”
9. Set rewarding goals. For example, ‘When I am done with work, I will go to the gym,’ works much better than ‘I should go to the gym.’
There’s some helpful stuff here for anyone – yes, even for the Christian – who is looking for practical ways to translate the desire to resist temptation into reality. However, although Christians may use some of these techniques, we have a much more Christ-centered approach to temptation. We do not stand alone, in our own weak will-power, against the tempestuous tide of temptation. Rather we stand on and with the Rock. Here are some of the extra resources He gives us:
1. Christ’s love. Just as Christ’s love for us constrains and compels evangelism (2 Cor. 5:14), so it also constrains and compels obedience (1 Jn. 4:19). 2. Christ’s Word. Just as Christ Himself resisted temptation with Scripture (Luke 4:1-14), so we do too (Eph. 6:17). 3. Christ’s example. Consideration of Christ’s holy life inspires and empowers perseverance in holiness (Heb. 12:3) 4. Christ’s Spirit. Christ is with and in His people by His Spirit (Gal. 5:16-18). He does not send us into battle, He comes with us. 5. Christ’s sympathy. As He was tempted on all points, like as we are, we can go to one who sympathizes with us as we face strong temptation in our human weakness (Heb. 4:15). 6. Christ’s grace. When we come to Christ, we not only get sympathy, we get strong grace to help in our time of need (Heb. 4:16). 7. Christ’s forgiveness. We are going to fail and fall. But there’s no need to wallow in strength-draining guilt. We can come to Christ for immediate forgiveness (Jn. 8:11; 1 John 1:9). We start again with a re-formatted hard-drive (“clean sheet” for the older generation). Yes temptation is greater today. But Christ is greater still.
Download here.
This week I interview Tim about his new book, Sexual Detox: A guide for guys who are sick of porn. You can buy it here in print, audio, or electronic format. Read more here.
Wrestling with an Angel
If you have been blessed by Greg Lucas’s posts at Wrestling with an Angel, then you will certainly want to buy his new book of the same name. And if you need further persuasion, then read his latest blog post about the mysterious communication between God and Greg’s disabled son, Jake.
Salvation Reading List
Keith Mathison has an excellent survey of a number of books dealing with the doctrine of salvation in general and Calvinism in particular. He helpfully distinguishes which books would be best for different levels of Christian maturity.
Steven Smith’s Dying to Preach is one of the most uncomfortable books on preaching I’ve ever read.
It is also one of the best, especially for those who have been preaching for a few years.
Don’t read this book if you are just looking for a few tweaks and tips for next Sunday morning. Read it only if you want your whole view of preaching to be turned upside down and inside out. If you still dare to buy it, be warned: you are going to be ruffled, stung, provoked and offended. At times you will react with, “No way!” and, “That’s going too far!” But as the author’s biblical arguments work on your conscience, you will gradually submit, slowly agree, and pick up the book again.
The author is Steven Smith, assistant professor of preaching, and the James T. Draper Jr. Chair of Pastoral Ministry at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. His basic thesis is that the nature of our message should impact the way we present and communicate our message. Those who preach a crucified Christ should preach in a crucified style. And even though it is more about style than substance, the whole book is an argument for an absence of style, or a crucified style.
In the preface Smith asks:
If the cross is God’s chosen means of salvation, why is it not also our means of communication? If God saved through the cross, can we not preach through the cross? If the cross was God’s means, why is it not ours? …If God will save through the abject humility of crucifixion, will He sanctify with messages from preachers who don’t imitate the abject humility of crucifixion? Must not a message of death to life be communicated from a preacher who dies so that others might live? (13)
Or, more succinctly: “A cross from the pulpit logically means a cross in the pulpit. So every preacher dying to preach must die to preach” (13). I Iike the way Johnny Hunt put it in his blurb: “The preacher will see little life in the pews until he sees much death in the pulpit.”
That concept is so alien to Western preachers today that it may take you a few chapters and maybe even a few re-readings until you grasp what Smith is getting it. However, it is certainly worth persevering with.
He begins with two chapters on the cross in Paul’s pulpit ministry. In page after page of insightful commentary on 1 & 2 Corinthians, Smith argues that Paul’s principal understanding of ministry to the Corinthians was “dying for others,” a claim he supports with 20 verses from the Corinthian letters.
He then draws four implications of the cross in the pulpit:
Thirdly, Smith highlights three results when a preacher begins to die so that others may live:
(i) He surrenders to the text by precise, humble, long-term study that produces clear, cliché-free communication.
(ii) He surrenders to the audience. This does not mean caving in to the sheep’s demands but feeling the sheep’s pain. “Passion for the text must be accompanied by compassion for the people…Shepherds smell like sheep, and surrendered communicators have a ‘feel’ for people who are in the dark.”
(iii) Last, he surrenders to the task of great preaching. Having spent most of the book arguing against style, arguing for a crucified style, Smith recognizes the tension of this final point and asks, “Is it biblical to want to preach good sermons?” He answers:
We must become better in our preaching because God uses good preaching. With all the liabilities we have mentioned, with all of the red flags about style over substance, with all the warnings about a self-centered pulpit, we must commit ourselves to becoming good preachers. So with eight chapters of warning against letting the good of decent preaching rob people of the best of seeing Christ in the text, let me stop and scream, “Strive for good preaching” (156).
And what motivates us to work hard on improving our preaching? Smith returns to the cross: “Christ expended everything on the cross, because leaving anything undone would not have accomplished God’s will” (157).
I was intrigued and encouraged by Smith’s support from a return to more extemporaneous preaching, something I also am passionately in favor of. And to prove his point, he turns to the sermon that is often used to argue for full manuscripts being read in the pulpit; Jonathan Edward’s “Sinners in the hands of an angry God.” Citing research, Smith says that under the influence of George Whitefield, Jonathan Edwards was convicted of the power of extemporaneous preaching and shifted his sermon delivery accordingly. No longer did he use the manuscript, but rather he made the conscious decision to shift away from notes (156).
I did disagree with Smith’s exposition of Colossians 1:24 on pages 80-81. I know this is one of the most difficult verses in the New Testament. However, I’m concerned that Smith’s choice of vocabulary here unwittingly undermines the perfection of Christ’s finished work on the cross.
With that small reservation, I highly commend this book to preachers who have been preaching for a few years. What about students and others just beginning to preach? I’m not saying no. In some ways this would be a great foundational book, and would perhaps save some from getting off on the wrong foot and heading in the wrong direction. However, I would advise students to read a few of the classic homiletics texts first to get the basics of “How-to preach” and then read this one. This is more about the preaching mindset than the mechanics. It would be difficult to understand what Smith is getting at without some experience of preparing and preaching sermons.
Let me clinch your purchase with an appetizer of the many quotable quotes in this book:
The death to self that is demanded of the preacher works life in his people. In this way, the preacher becomes like Christ, who died so that we might live. If we do not die, they do not live. (18).
An obsession with style will actually be counterproductive to the Gospel message (52).
For a preacher to die, he must die to his right to be thought of as a great preacher (53).
Paul is suggesting a horrific, criminal irony: the means of preaching displaces the message of preaching (74).
Preaching ourselves, even in small inconsequential ways, can be the few small lumens that keep people from the true satisfying glorious light of Christ (74).
Death is in the pew because few are willing to die in the pulpit (88).
We are redeemed rebels who are calling other rebels to be redeemed. We are no longer managing our image. No. We have thrown off our robes and are taking the long walk outside the city. We are looking up at the thrashed corpse and taking a stand-this is who we are! We are cross bearers because we are cross lovers (98).
Steven W. Smith. Dying to Preach. Kregel, 2009. 175 pages.
Review first posted at TGC Reviews.
Corinth Reformed Church are hosting the Young & Reformed Conference from 22-23 October in Byron Center, Michigan (20 mins from Grand Rapids). I’m told that “Old & Reformed” are very welcome too.
On Friday at 7pm Kevin DeYoung will speak on “A Great Resurgence, Grand Rapids, and a Guy Named Guido: Why Theology is to Die for.” On Saturday morning Mike Wittmer will speak on “Your only comfort: How Reformed Theology meets our needs.” There will also be a Question Panel and a few Breakout sessions before everything wraps up at 1pm on Saturday. Visit the website here for more details.