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It's time for preachers to think about the Carols services, Christingles, Nativity plays, etc.

It's also a time to miss a golden opportunity.  The golden opportunity is to preach a theology of incarnation. But, year in and year out, this chance is missed in evangelical churches.

Our mentions of incarnation boil down to the Abrupt, the Apologetic or the Anselmian.

The Abrupt:

“God in skin. Weird huh? Anyway…”

The Apologetic:

“Jesus shows up in time and space which means that we can verify the truth through historical methods, and really the New Testament documents are very reliable don’t you know…”

The Anselmian:

“God basically wants to acquit his elect and so needs a Scapegoat to take the fall. And there he is the manger. Weird huh?  Anyway…”

My twitter feed is full of encouragements to preachers to 'get beyond the manger'. Many people seem worried that preachers might focus on the wonder of the incarnation itself. At Christmas! The very idea.

I completely agree that crib and cross go together, but if that's true, where are all the Easter encouragements: "Hey preachers! Don't forget the incarnation on Good Friday!" The answer is nowhere. Which is a problem.

I'd love to hear three different 'A's this Christmas. I'd love for preachers to bring out the Athanasian, Atoning, and Abasing themes.

The Athanasian Incarnation:

“In this marvellous exchange, He becomes what we are, that we might become what He is”?

The Atoning Incarnation:

"Here is God-With-Us, come to make us at-one in His very Person!"

The Abasing Incarnation:

"My God is so small, so weak and so helpless, there's nothing that He will not do... for you!"

I wonder if we shy away from the Athanasian incarnation because we don't want to get into (or don't properly understand) the trinitarian theology that makes sense of it.

I wonder if we shy away from the Atoning incarnation because ontology has no place in our thinking about atonement. This is also why our Easter sermons contain no theology of resurrection - only a 'proof that the cross worked'.

I wonder if we shy away from the Abasing incarnation because we default to a theology of glory and are uncomfortable with the little LORD Jesus.

If any of these guesses are anywhere near the mark, let me suggest a remedy.  Read Athanasius' On the Incarnation and hear the kind of Christmas message that has warmed the hearts of millions down through the ages.  Get started here as you listen to Mike Reeves read extracts.

And for what they're worth, here are three of my own posts on incarnation:

Incarnation and Trinity

Incarnation and Creation

Incarnation and Salvation

(For good measure here’s a paper on Athanasius and Irenaeus)

These are some talks in which I've tried to preach this theology...

 

Evangelistic carols service – Four Approaches to Christmas (and to Life) Isaiah 9:2-7

Christmas is God laying hold of us - Hebrews 2:14-18

Christmas is for Dark Places

 The Coming King - Psalm 72

In the beginning… – John 1:1-2

The Word became flesh – John 1:14

Christmas brings a crisis – John 1:15-18

Student Carols – Isaiah 9  (different to the other Isaiah 9)

Luke 1:26-38

All-age: Christmas turns slaves to sons – Galatians 4:4-7

All-age Carols Talk: Christmas is weird – Phil 2:5-11

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Here are some all-age songs on the same theme and our Christmas videos

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What resources have you found helpful?  Please share the wealth in comments...

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Christmas in Dark Places 2

Ok, quick help needed. We've just filmed a reflective spoken word for Christmas. It's about Christmas in dark places. At the beginning we're thinking of displaying a couple of statistics to show that Christmas can be tough. Which should we use:

This year 500 000 UK families lost someone.

On Christmas Day, 250,000 elderly Britons will be alone...

In the UK, 80 000 children will be homeless at Christmas.

Post-Christmas is the busiest time for divorce lawyers.

“Sandy Hook”

“Boxing Day Tsunami”

Any others?

We can only use 2, three at most.

And also, should it be called "Christmas in the dark" or "Christmas in dark places"?

Something else?

Your help will be gratefully received and stay tuned for the video. It'll be out very soon!

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TEP-PodcastCover-1024x1024In our series on online witness we have interviewed

Graham Miller of London City Mission

Gavin Tyte - Beatboxing Pastor

Matt Rich from the evangelistic site Groundwire

In this episode we talk to Tim Chester from The Crowded House in Sheffield.

Tim is the author of numerous books on subjects ranging from church planting to mission and social action to the Trinity. He recently wrote "Will you be my Facebook Friend?" where he raises vital questions about our online presence.

Are we creating false images of ourselves online? Are we substituting online community for face to face fellowship? Are we spending too long on social media? Is our online engagement properly Christian?

Andy and I chat to Tim about evangelism in general and our online witness in particular.

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evangelismRecently I asked a room of students what they would like me to cover in some upcoming evangelism training. The first two responses were telling...

How can we mention Jesus without it being awkward?

How can you tell someone "I'm praying for you" without it sounding weird?

I love those two questions because they pretty much sum up the entirety of evangelism. If you're someone who mentions Jesus a lot, who prays for your friends and tells them you're praying for them, you are basically the Billy Graham of personal evangelism. Honestly, it doesn't get any better than that.

You mightn't have a clue what to think about current affairs, let alone how to bring Jesus into it.  You may have no answer to "the problem of evil" (of course the person we should really worry about is the guy who 'solves' the problem of evil). It may never have occurred to you that the latest Box Office Hit echoes the gospel in its redemptive plotline. But if you awkwardly but repeatedly mention Jesus, and if you pray for your friends and - weirdo alert! - tell people you're praying for them - you are my evangelism hero and I want to be just like you.

The only thing I'd add to this odd-ball strategy would be - cringe factor!! - invite folks to church. Not necessarily the polished evangelistic event. I just mean church with all its embarrassments which you, as a family member, are very aware of. At that point, it's pretty much job done: mention Jesus, pray for your friends, invite them to church. There's my evangelism training in a nut-shell.

Now, if you want to do those things and not feel awkward... me too. But I'm not sure there's training in the world that can disarm the jarring power of the name of Jesus. And if there is, you should avoid it like the plague.

Evangelism means identifying with Christ in the world of Adam. No training can prevent a mortifying clash. But... if you embrace the mortification you'll be a better evangelist than all the training in the world can make you!

 

 

 

56

Jesus is Good Samaritan

A repost from the King's English.
Get the Daily Devotional here.

It’s one of the most famous stories Jesus ever told.  A beautiful stranger helps a man left for dead when his own people disdain and forsake him.  Those who ignore his sufferings are Levites and Priests – the holiest of the holy.  The stranger is a Samaritan – from that race of hated half-breeds to the north.  Nonetheless he shows incredible compassion.  And Jesus ends with that famous imperative: “Go and do thou likewise.”

And so it is generally assumed that this is a simple morality tale.  We conclude that Jesus wants us to copy this good ethical practice.  Or He wants to break down racial divides and show that love is the heart of it all.  Or…  what is the point of this parable?

Well read it for yourself - Luke 10:25-37.

And first notice the question that prompts the story.  The lawyer asks ‘Who is my neighbour?’ (v29).  When Jesus finishes the story He asks the crowd who was neighbour to the one left for dead? (v36).  Therefore the key interpretive question is this:  With whom is Jesus asking us to identify?  The priest? The Levite? The Samaritan?

None of the above.  Not first of all.  First and foremost we are asked to see ourselves as the man left for dead.  And from his perspective we are to assess who is a good neighbour.  This is the first clue – we are meant to put ourselves in the shoes of the fallen man.

Why do I say ‘fallen’?  Well the man’s fallenness is triply-underlined in v30.  He “goes down from Jerusalem (which in biblical imagery is an earthly counterpart to the heavenly Zion).  He is heading towards the outskirts of the land (Jericho) which is due east of this mountain sanctuary (notice the echoes of Eden).  This would involve a physical descent of about a thousand metres in the space of just 23 miles.  If that wasn’t bad enough, the man “falls” among robbers.  He is stripped, plagued (literally that’s the word in v30), abandoned and half-dead.  Here is the man’s precidament.  And Jesus wants us to see it as our predicament.  So what hope do we have?

The priest?  No, no hope there.  The Levite?  No chance.  What about a ‘certain Samaritan’?  (Notice how the ‘certain’ mirrors the ‘certain man’ of v30)?  This Samaritan is the answer to the fallen man.

And this man is nothing like the religious.  In fact he would equally have been shunned by the priest and Levite!

Yet this Samaritan ‘had compassion’ (v33).  In the New Testament this verb, which could be translated ‘he was moved in his bowels with pity’, is used only of Jesus. (Matt. 9:36; 14:14; 15:32; 18:27; 20:34; Mk. 1:41; 6:34; 8:2; 9:22; Lk. 7:13; 10:33; 15:20) In every narrative passage Jesus is the subject of the verb and the three parables in which it is used are the merciful King of Matthew 18 (v27), this story and the father in the Two Sons (Luke 15:20).

Well this Good Samaritan comes across the man left for dead and, for emphasis, we are twice told about him ‘coming’ to the man (v33 and 34).  The Outsider identifies with the spurned and wretched.

Now remember whose shoes we are in as Jesus tells this story.  We are meant to imagine ourselves as this brutalized, fallen man.  Now read from v33:

As he journeyed, [he] came where he was: and when he saw him, he had compassion on him,  And went to him, and bound up his wounds, pouring in oil and wine, and set him on his own beast, and brought him to an inn, and took care of him.  And on the morrow when he departed, he took out two pence, and gave them to the host, and said unto him, Take care of him; and whatsoever thou spendest more, when I come again, I will repay thee.  (Luke 10:33-35)

So there you are in your half-dead wretchedness.  Religion has been no help to you, but this beautiful stranger does everything.  He comes near, takes pity, heals, carries, cares and pays for it all.  A penny was a day’s wage (Matthew 20:2).  The inn keeper is given two pence.  We therefore assume that when he “comes again” it will be the third day.  Then he will bring to completion the work he has begun.

Are we in the picture? Have we put ourselves in the shoes of the fallen man?  Have we appreciated the love of the good Samaritan?

Well then, now:

Go and do thou likewise. (v37)

Don’t first conjure up the character of the good samaritan.  First be the fallen man.  First experience the compassion of this loving Outsider.  Then go and do likewise.

This is not a simple morality tale.  The centre is not our resolve to be good samaritans.  The Centre is Christ Himself.  If we miss Him in any part of Scripture we turn gospel into law and blessings into curses.

But when we see Jesus… well, that’ll preach!

I was like a wounded man

Jesus came all the way down.

On a Friday evening, He died on a Roman cross

Early one Sunday morning He got up

How many of you believe – He got up?

Thank You, for being a Good Samaritan

Thank You, You didn’t have to do it

Thank You, for taking my feet out of the miry clay,

Thank You, for setting them on the rock

Thank you, for saving me,

Thank You, for binding up my wounds

Thank You, for healing my wounds

Thank You, for fighting my battles

Did He pick you up?

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TEP-PodcastCover-1024x1024Andy and I are in a series discussing online evangelism. Last week we spoke to Gavin Tyte about just living out our passions authentically and allowing our love for Jesus to naturally flow. This week we think about more intentional online witness.

Matt Rich runs a chat helpline website called Groundwire that connects with hundreds of people a month, answering questions about the Christian faith, and pointing people to Jesus through their local church.

I think Groundwire is a fascinating example of how pastoral care and evangelism coincide. If you ask me evangelism is pastoral care and pastoral care is evangelism. Our churches and our mission will be a lot healthier when we make those links.

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bibleIf you didn't know, I blogged my way through the King James Bible in 2011. I covered a famous phrase every day as a daily devotional. Check it out here to get a flavour.

Maybe it would make a good Christmas present for someone you know. Or perhaps it could aid you in your own Bible reading for 2014.

I make virtually no money from the sale of them, I just offer them as a resource. Others have enjoyed them, you might too...

KE recommendations

 

All In One

All 365 devotions in one volume, from "In the beginning" to "Alleluia".

As a paperback: £13.95

Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.

As a hardback: £21.99

Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.

Also available as a Kindle...

From Amazon.com: $3.09

From Amazon.co.uk: £1.93

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January - March

The first quarter takes in Genesis to Ruth - "In the beginning" to "Shelter under his wings."

Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.

Kindle version US: $2.99

Kindle version UK: £1.92

Click here to order print edition on Lulu

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April - June

In this quarter we travel from 1 Samuel right up to the opening of the Gospels.

Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.

Kindle from Amazon.com ($2.99)

Kindle from Amazon.co.uk (£1.89)

Click here to order print edition on Lulu

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July - September

In this quarter we hear the teaching of Christ from the Gospels.

Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.

Kindle from Amazon.com ($2.99)

Kindle from Amazon.co.uk (£1.96)

Click here to order print edition on Lulu.

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October - December

In the final instalment we reach an exultant "Alleluia."

Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.

Kindle from Amazon.com ($3.08)

Kindle from Amazon.co.uk (£1.91)

Click here to order print edition on Lulu

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Thanks very much to James Watts for the cover designs!

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Ah, the Aztec priest, there's a man after my own heart

Captain Sacrifabulous. (My altar ego)

Earn £££s from the comfort of your own home. Enrol in our School of Voodoo Acupuncture. Act now and receive a free doll.

Why curse when our stainless steel needles can remotely bless a friend or family member? #VoodooAcupuncture

Cos, you know, you'd stick needles in the doll. But in a good way, see? See what I did? #VoodooAcupuncture

Darn it! http://voodooacupuncture.com is taken. And there's already a Facebook page. 7 likes, if you were wondering.

Lawyers! Remember the Queen of all 1D fans can assist your case. That's right, Miss Direction helps con jurors.

 

Church: God's mission strategy for the world

You want to 'balance' faith & works? You want to 'balance' grace & holiness? You may as well try to 'balance' a tree & its fruit

Our constant fear: if we're known we won't be loved. But John10:14-15, we are seen to the depths & loved to eternity #EnjoyYourDay

My friend won't lend me his Joseph Heller novel till I've read it! #therearenowords

My seive's better than yours. #HolierThanThou

The 23rd Psalm is Christ speaking - the Anointed One who 'returns' to the house of the LORD. The good news is... His cup overflows to you.

The Word became flesh and remains flesh. He has pledged His life, His future, His very being to us forevermore. #EnjoyYourDay

it's a sob-aphone... A SOB-APHONE, for crying out loud.

The sign of Immanuel is as deep as Sheol and as high as Heaven - the virgin's Child comprehends all things Isaiah7:10-14

Hosea6:6 paraphrase - I want love-passed-on not sacrifice-offered-up #gracerunsdownhill

To enter the kingdom you must become like great warriors? Bible experts? Sinless saints? No - little children. Matt18:3 #EnjoyYourDay

#Ps32 All transgressions forgiven & sins covered. Hidden in Christ. Protected from trouble. Surrounded by songs of deliverance #EnjoyYourDay

1Sam16: David chosen & NOT his brothers. 1Sam17: David chooses to fight FOR his brothers. Election = 1st our reprobation then our salvation

"We must not be nervous abt “parallels” & “pagan Christs”: they ought 2b there—it wd be a stumbling block if they weren’t." Lewis

The door said push, I pulled. Lesser men would feel embarrassed but my *genuine* 1st thought was: "To me, that font communicates 'pull'"

 

For the empty (children), heaven's gates are as wide as Jesus' arms. For the full (rich young ruler) they are as narrow as the eye of a needle.

Enjoying 'Jesus on Every Page' by @davidpmurray on the train...

"Abraham's faith wrapped itself around the promised Satan-crushing, world-blessing, life-giving Seed of the woman, just as ours does"

"What mercy for Jesus to save David! What compassion for Jesus to save Samson! What forgiveness for Jesus to pardon Rahab!"

"Whenever we read of souls being converted in the OT it is 2 the Messiah they were turned- not 2 God in general but 2 Christ in particular"

<< "They heard the gospel and they believed in the coming Savior"

"Unless we understand that OT saints were saved by grace thru faith in the Messiah we will view them as moralists, ritualists & legalists"

"As the Angel of the LORD, Christ was continually at work thruout the OT- revealing, redeeming, covenanting, interceding, comforting etc..."

Contradictory Celebs: Matt Gloss, Demi More, Bleak Lively #contradictorycelebs

What kind of God is He? The kind that puts everything on hold because a woman in need tugs at His shirt. #Jesus #Mark5 #EnjoyYourDay

Why can't you earn heaven? Because no-one auditions for a Family

What to have with my bacon sandwich: Ketchup or HP? #crowdsaucing

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