Here are some of the most noteworthy reads discovered recently:
Be a Peacemaker, Not a Peacekeeper. "For a long time, I thought that working for peace meant staying quiet – withdrawing from conflict, brushing aside whatever was bothering me, ignoring my own feelings and opinions to appease someone else, doing anything to avoid rocking the boat. It seemed like the nice thing to do, even the Christian thing to do. But then I realised that it is not really peacemaking, but peacekeeping."
Things Revealed, HT to Challies. I was pondering this very concept recently. "A lot of us spend our time trying to read that book called 'The Secret Things' while all the time the book called 'The Things Revealed' is sitting right in front of us. God has given it to us and it belongs to us and to our children so we won't just read it but also obey it."
9 Wrong Ways to Read the Bible (And One Better Way). "When we yawn over the Bible, that's like a severe asthmatic yawning over the free offer of a ventilator while gasping for air. Read the Bible asking not mainly whom to imitate and how to live but what it shows us about a God who loves to save and about sinners who need saving."
Fading Joy: Am I Seeking an Experience or a Relationship? "Too often we value a feeling over the reality that would produce that feeling. We want to feel close to God without actually drawing close to God. We want the benefits of a close walk with God without the heart change required to walk with God. Many times, we want the outward trappings without the inward transformation. Our need for an experience can become an idol that dethrones God in our lives."
Teach What the Bible Says First, HT to Knowable Word. "Sometimes, people who are teaching the Bible try much too hard to be brilliant, giving us their own insights into life rather than letting the brilliance of the Bible speak for itself. Let the Bible speak! I would rather hear one halting, inexperienced speaker show me God in a text of the Bible than hear 1,000 polished pastors give me their three-point, alliterated instructions for life, which are often only loosely based on the actual text."
The Sin of Provoking. "It's one thing, as Proverbs cautions, to recognize an angry person and beware; it's quite another thing to provoke to the point of an angry response an individual who is seeking to do right (and then condemning the person for their angry response)." Yes! I am glad to see this addressed.
Bitter Roots, HT to Challies. "At some time each of us is affected by unfairness and hurt. Each of our stories would be, could be, maybe even should be different had people or situations not altered our path. . . . We can choose to replay wrong and rewind hurt. But when I read God's Word, I come back time and time again to this."
A Diligent Wife, HT to Challies. "So, I began to pray. For my marriage, yes. But, more than my marriage, I began to pray for my heart. The kids weren't going to stop needing me. Giving up my role as a Mom wasn't an option. But neither was quitting on my marriage. How could I be a wife and a Mom? Was it possible to be both? What could this look like, and where was I to start? What needed to change in me in order to invest more fully in my marriage?" This is the first of a 31-day series that looks great so far.
Wanted: Spiritual Mothers. HT to Challies. "The truth is, you're never too old to no longer want your mom—the mom you may or may not have ever had. One who not only cares for you physically, but also speaks into your life with spiritual wisdom and comfort, who prays for you and builds you up with words of experience and knowledge, who reminds you of how much God loves you and desires a relationship with you."
Fall color video, HT to Story Warren. If you need a dose of fall color, these drone shots of gorgeous autumn trees will feed your spirit.
Finally, these ceramic masters are amazing, HT to Steve Laube. They make it look so easy. Some years ago, a man demonstrated to our church what was involved in throwing and shaping clay. He and his wife were going as artists to a country that did not welcome missionaries. As he worked, he pointed our various parallels between what he was doing and what God does for us. Though the whole demonstration was wonderful, the one thing that stood out to me was the intimacy of what he was doing. The wheel is almost in the potter's lap. He's bent over it, his arms around it. That picture of God as being over us, surrounding us, carefully watching and shaping us, has stayed with me for years.
Something secondary came to mind as I watched this video: creating art is messy before it is beautiful. The artist's aren't bothered by getting their hands dirty or brushing away shavings. They have the finished project in mind.
Hope you have a lovely weekend!
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