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About reveds

Occupation: Pastor, Ebenezer Presbyterian Church, Lennox, SD Education: BS - Christian Education, Sterling College; MDiv. - Princeton Theological Seminary Family: Married, with Four children. Hobbies: Running (will someday run a marathon), Sci-Fi (especially Doctor Who and Sherlock), Theater, and anything else my kids will let me do.

More Recommended Reading

Every now and then I like to share with you the books that I have read.  I do this not to say, “Hey look at how much I read,” but, rather, to encourage you with some of the resources that have been an encouragement to me and to my ministry.  I hope that these resources will be a blessing to your faith.

Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Prophet, Martyr, Spy, by Eric Metaxes.  ”In Hitler’s Germany, a Lutheran pastor chooses resistance and pays with his life… Eric Metaxas tells Bonhoeffer’s story with passion and theological sophistication, often challenging revisionist accounts that make Bonhoeffer out to be a ‘humanist’ or ethicist for whom religious doctrine was easily disposable… Metaxas reminds us that there are forms of religion — respectable, domesticated, timid — that may end up doing the devil’s work for him.” — Wall Street Journal

One of the hardest things for a biography is making the written account of a life seem worthwhile reading, but that is precisely where Metaxes’ book excels.  Giving a comprehensive view of Bonhoeffer’s life, theology, work, and passion, the book makes you feel a part of the story more than a distant observer.  And while you know how the story ends, you find yourself praying for the impossible, for escape, release, for freedom and love to triumph (which, in some ways, truly does).

King’s Cross: The Story of the World in the Life of Jesus, by Tim Keller.  I have really come to enjoy Tim Keller’s writing.  In books like The Prodigal God, and Counterfeit Gods Keller applies great perspective and insight from Scripture to our lives today.  King’s Cross is not different.  Walking through the Gospel of Mark, Keller shows how Christ has come to cut through all the layers we have used to insulate our broken and dying souls, so that he might bring us to new life.  “Keller shows how the story of Jesus is at once cosmic, historical, and personal, calling each of us to look anew at our relationship with God.”

 The Purpose of Man: Designed for Worship, by A.W. Tozer.  We all can recite the first answer of the Westminster Catechism, “Man’s chief end is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.”  But what does it really mean that our purpose in life is to live for God’s glory?  Tozer, a minister in the Christian and Missionary Alliance from 1919 to 1963, argues that in the Garden, man did not have to ask what it meant to worship God, because he lived with and communed with the very presence of God.  But since the fall, this sweet communion has been lost, and with it, we have also lost our very purpose in life.  Tozer suggests that Christ overcame “death and rose again from the grave… that he might make worshipers out of rebels.”  A powerful yet easy read, I highly recommend this for anyone who is interested in regaining a passion for worshiping God.

 Love Wins: A Book about Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person who ever Lived, by Rob Bell.  Okay, a disclaimer first.  I cannot wholeheartedly recommend this book.  As a matter of fact, I pretty much disagreed with everything written in it.  I did not appreciate Bell’s use of Scripture (taking things grossly out of context, or basing an entire argument on one verse while ignoring other passages that might contradict his conclusions), neither do I think that his “deconstructionist” (my term, not his) view of the Church, the Faith, or the Bible is at all helpful to the Kingdom of God.  I do not recommend this book to those who are not well versed in Scripture or secure in their reformed faith.

Still, I pass it along to you for this one reason: often times we who think we know what we believe and why need to be challenged out of our complacency (which was one of the reasons I attended Princeton Theological Seminary).  Being confronted by something that goes against everything you believe can sometimes help you come to articulate and reform your faith.  Bell’s book on Hell has done that for me.  There were times I couldn’t stand the book.  I’ve highlighted and written my comments throughout his pages.  But, praise the Lord, Bell caused me to go back to the Bible and reread what I thought it said, discover what it doesn’t say, and reevaluate my beliefs accordingly.  In that regard, I cautiously recommend this book (just don’t let your evangelical friends catch you reading it).

Good Reading!

SDG

Believing is Seeing

“Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.”
(Hebrews 11:1 (ESV)

“Seeing is Believing,” or so the saying goes.  I have to admit, being around the block a time or two, this adage has taken root in my life. 

“I’ll clean my room dad, right after this show ends.”  Right.  I’ve heard that before.

“You’ve been entered in a drawing for a fabulous prize, no purchase necessary.”  Sure.

“We’ll be there to fix your cable between 9 and 11.”  Uh huh.

“If you elect me, it won’t be politics as usual…”  I believe it when I see it.

Is it wrong to be so jaded?  I’d like to think that I am an optimistic person, I look for the best in other people.  Still, I’ve been let down.  I’ve let people down.  To be honest, I’ve even disappointed myself.  So while I may be hopeful, I am a realist.  Perhaps I’ve got some Missouri “Show-Me” State blood in me after all (perish the thought).  I’ll believe it when I see it, because seeing is believing.

Except…

That’s really not the way of faith.  Hebrews 11:1 tells us that “faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.”  We are told that Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness (Gen 15:6; Rom 4:3).  Abraham was old, really old, and God promised Abraham that his offspring would outnumber the stars.  This was impossible, there was no way Abraham could have said, “Yeah, I see how that could happen.”  But still he believed.  He trusted that what God said, God would do.  For Abraham, believing allowed him to see; believing was seeing.

Paul, when the ship taking him to Rome was tempest-tossed, encouraged the men on board saying, “there will be no loss of life among you, but only the ship.  For this very night there stood before me an angel of the God to whom I belong and whom I worship, and he said, ‘Do not be afraid, Paul; you must stand before Caesar.  And behold, God has granted you all those who sail with you.’ So take heart men, for I have faith in God that it will be exactly as I have been told.  But we must run aground on some island” (Acts 27:21-26).  There was no tangible evidence that the passengers and crew of this ship would survive, the storm and the sea surely would destroy them.  But Paul believed.  He trusted that what God said, God would do.  For Paul, believing allowed him to see; believing was seeing.

And so we have deliverance from our pessimistic, jaded attitude; we can trust in the promises of God.  What are you struggling to believe?  Do God’s promises seem so farfetched, so unattainable, so impossible that their just not worth believing?  Believe God, and you will see how God is doing impossible things all the time.  Remember, “all things are possible with God” (Mark 10:27). 

The good news is our Christian faith is not a blind faith.  Rather, our faith allows us to see.  In faith, believing the witness of the Word of God, we see how God has worked in the past to deliver and renew His people.  In faith, we see the love of God poured out for us on the Cross of Christ to ransom us and save us from sin.  In faith, we see how God has called us from death to life.  In faith, we see how all of God’s promises have been confirmed, and that God is faithful and just to complete what He has started.  In faith, then, we can also look forward in hope and see that “goodness and mercy shall follow us all our days, and [through Christ] we shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever” (Psalm 23).

May you be strengthened in your faith, so that you may believe and see the goodness of God.

SDG