![]() The Hidden Christmas Introduction & Chapter One November 27, 2016 Our first meeting together on the first day of Advent started out on a hopeful note. Timothy Keller is a pastor who dedicates this book to his grandchildren. It gives us the sense of a wise father passing down the gospel to the next generation. This is an approach that invites us to hear what is taught and thoughtfully engage the teachings. Keller’s tone in the book has a smile (at times a smirk when the world acts out in unbecoming manners) because Christmas is a time for joy. It’s a joy because of the incarnation of God in the earth. Joy to the world indeed! Although Keller’s approach is not casted in the light of Advent, we who are journeying during this time are mindful of the ancient church tradition that inaugurates our church calendar. Keller’s joy though is easy to mistake as incidental happiness that any of us can have if we can get in the Christmas spirit! This appears to where the battle lines are drawn for our study. Christmas is most holy for Christian observance yet, a secular festival of lights. Keller does not take the banal method of criticizing consumerism at Christmas (in some sense for this to remain a secular festival it will ever hold onto the transactional nature of gift giving). No, Keller deals with the issue of sentimentality. It’s this prevailing mood that does no good. The problem of sentimentality is its lack of truthfulness and unrealistic ways of living in this world. The Christian response is one that sees the battle as a clash of light and darkness. It’s not one that is between persons and peoples but in all of our hearts. To be a Christian is recognize by admitting the truth that I am blind and that Jesus alone can heal us. This is the human condition and none of us are exempt from being malaise with this disease. We want to say as Christians we are in the light (and we are because of Christ’s light) but we still struggle and fight with disordered desires and decrepit ways of being human as a people. Yes we are people called out of darkness into God’s glorious light but this does not mean our battle is over, if anything, it intensifies. It is this admittance of Sin’s power that engenders self-centredness and shows how persistent spiritual blindness can be that gives the Christian a heartfelt sense of joy. You see, we live as Christians, by the hope of God’s light shining upon us and penetrating the stoniest heart to manifest the light within that it may shine through. Our blindness as a Christian would be to say we have no struggle. Listen to Jesus in the Gospel of John: “For judgment I came into this world, that those who do not see may see, and those who see may become blind.” (9:39) Now listen to the offence this created in the ears of the Pharisees (some of whom made Jesus their opponent): “Are we also blind?” (9:40) Jesus’ reply is telling: “If you were blind, you would have no guilt; but now that you say, ‘We see,’ your guilt remains.” (9:41) What this exchange means for us as Christians during this time of Advent hopes is this…we are in the dark in desperate need of light. This is not something the new convert simply learns and then goes on his/her merry way, rather, it is the chance to now live as disciples who recognize the profound bankruptcy of our thought life, humanity and spiritual reception of God’s life. We live by the miracle of God’s grace. We don’t have anything that makes it easier or better as we journey into Christ. No! We bear a cross in the hopes of imitating the Master who is our Lord, Jesus Christ. Advent is a time to come to terms with our incipient nature to not relate to God with who we are on a regular basis. It is a time to discover as the light shines on you, our unpreparedness for the coming of the King. What hope do we have other than that the baby will be born and by otherworldly intervention we will hear and believe! Such is the hope of a Christian community of brothers and sisters who do not deny they are beginning to see but neither denies there is this recurring blindness. Blindness toward what you may ask? Blindness that says we are not blind and is thereby ignorant of our unloving stony hearts in need of a Spirit transformation. We need Jesus Christ more than we think or know. Are you ready to join us this Advent for the weeks ahead? Shalom.
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![]() Greetings fellow-wayfarer, two weeks ago (November 13, 2016) we went into groups of three for Sunday School. These are posted for your edification and to aid along in study of Paul's letter to the Colossians. Below are fifteen collections that I pray will stretch and strengthen you in your love for God. Shalom.
![]() Greetings, our last week in Sunday School (November 20, 2016) I wrote on the board various questions and musings on the letter of Colossians. Listed below are 12 questions I invite you to process and digest. Should you have any questions, feel free to let me know. Shalom!
![]() Now the servants and officers had made a charcoal fire, because it was cold, and they were standing and warming themselves. Peter also was with them, standing and warming himself. (John 18:18) Here we are in the high priest’s courtyard and on his premises a fire is made. Kingsford BBQ coals are ignited and the night is underway. This account is surrounded with intrigue. Jesus has been arrested and two of Jesus’ disciples enter the courtyard of the high priest. They are following Jesus at a distance to watch what will come of the recent events. Peter is our disciple in focus. He is seen in relation to Jesus whom he follows. The issue for us today on this fifth Sunday of Lent is that of temperature. The climate is cold we are told. Is this simply a weather notification to given us a more dramatic effect? This is doubtful. We are given insight into the fall of Peter. It is today’s image of a charcoal fire that shows us light. Light is a prominent and dominant image in the gospel of John. But it’s Lent and this is a time for judgment. It is the verdict that the true light Jesus Christ has been sent of the Father into this world and humanity refused the light and loved darkness. We don’t simply prefer our fallen condition we are enslaved to it and have no way out of it. Our human condition is powerless to do anything to change the decrepit sinister mindset that is ignorant to spiritual reality. Peter, one of Jesus’ choice disciples is recorded here to narrate his fall. We all have one, especially as disciples. There is something to be said about Peter’s denials here. He is denying his affiliation with Jesus Christ. Self-contradiction we are all riddled with it. This is more than simply, I struggle and you struggle because we are all human. It is a denial of our discipleship. To deny our discipleship is to ignore God’s claim on our lives. Our witness is rendered ineffective and darkened in understanding of God’s loving and gracious character. What’s more is we deny God’s wondrous work. What drew Peter to share in the artificial light of the charcoal fire? It was perhaps he was cold or perhaps a desire to hear what people are saying about Jesus. Whichever it could be, Peter fell into a specific temptation that all of us struggle with in various forms…I’m talking about the temptation to be relevant. It take various forms…we hunger to know what’s going on at all times, to appear in control without any signs of brokenness, Peter denies Christ because he is in denial. What is he in denial over? His view of God has been challenged. A common occurrence for people. What we know of God at the beginning will surely need revision as time goes on. Peter thinks he is loyal to Jesus…a good Christian we can say. But Christ predicts he will deny he knows Jesus three times before morning breaks. Jesus knows what Peter is made out of. He is not able to handle the pressure. Peter’s ignorance to Jesus’ knowledge is the way his denial is at work. He denies he is subject to folly. He overestimates himself and thinks too highly of his knowledge and walk with Jesus. But this sets him for a fall. Part of Peter’s denial is his demanding sense of immediacy he claims for himself. I will not only follow you but I will follow you now. The time is now to follow Lord and I shall not draw back. John 13:37 Peter’s words will not be mentioned again until chapter 18, our section today. The space between of some four chapters is intentional delay. It is partially to show that the demands of the now must be held off for some narrative time. Jesus is after all the protagonist, the central figure with His Father in John’s gospel. Peter’s actions including his denial is penultimate and takes a side for the sake of the Son of God. What does Jesus do during this space from John chapter 14 through 17? He addresses His disciples in an upper room discourse. It is concerning Jesus’ departure from this world back to the Father and the sending of the Holy Spirit. It is Jesus’ time to give His last words in His earthly ministry. The crowning moment of Jesus’ care for His own was shown in chapter 13 to be washing His disciples feet and it climaxes in His prayer for His disciples, those in the immediate and those in the future. Jesus has clear sharp vision of eternal life and bestows it on whom He will. This is the command He received of His Father. ![]() What we have here in Daniel 4 closes off a three part series since chapter 2. In these three chapters (Daniel 2, 3, 4) there is particular attention given to God working on King Nebuchadnezzar. The Babylonian ruler is given a chapter’s worth of attention here. This is shocking to say the least. After all, the Old Testament considers the life of the people of Israel. Why does Nebuchadnezzar have this chance to articulate his thoughts? Or perhaps everything spins on its head when we consider Karl Barth’s words, “The content of the Bible is not at all formed by right human thoughts about God but by the right divine thoughts about men.” This is not a Babylonian king parading in Israel’s Scriptures. It is God’s Word to Israel from a king who was responsible for besieging Jerusalem and being used by God to bring about Israel’s exile. For Nebuchadnezzar to have a lengthy chapter spanning 37 verses is surprising. Further to learn this is first person speech is shocking, even alarming! What follows is why this chapter could be one of the finest pieces of human confession in the entire Bible. Nebuchadnezzar the king is compelled in the opening verses to give an account of the Most High God’s deeds. This serves as a hinge from chapters 2 and 3. Nebuchadnezzar has had a dream sent from God and the encounter at the fiery furnace as two occurrences of the glory of God. In both accounts the king confesses that Daniel and Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah’s God is the true God and deserving of exclusive praise (see Daniel 2:47; 28-29). The other opening part to mention of chapter 4 is the king’s confession of God’s kingdom enduring from generation to generation (4:3b). This serves as a preparation for the following Babylonian monarch, Belshazzar’s arrival. This will be Nebuchadnezzar’s final words in the Bible. It is Nebuchadnezzar’s re-telling of what God the Most High did. God sent a dream to him that scared him. No one in his court could interpret the vision except Daniel. The king’s characterization of him is one whom the spirit of the gods dwells in. An apt description that preserves Nebuchadnezzar’s polytheistic understanding of reality. The Bible doesn’t seem to censor the otherwise contrary thoughts of this despotic ruler. Surprisingly, Nebuchadnezzar is the one telling the dream to Daniel without needing to reveal what it is to him. Rather Nebuchadnezzar states the dream as it is and Daniel interprets it. Before that however, Daniel is dismayed for a period of time. This will not be the last time that Daniel will be morbidly affected by dreams (only difference is he will be the recipient of the dreams). Daniel starts off saying that he wishes this dream is for his enemies. The dream is about a tree that is lofty in size that is chopped down by an otherworldly being’s command. But the tree’s stump is to be secured until seven times pass over him. Daniel tells the king he is the tree that will be cut down until you know that the Most High is God of heaven and gives kingdoms to whomever He pleases on earth. Sure enough, Nebuchadnezzar loses his mind (as close an example we have of mental illness today) and becomes animal like grazing in the field with unkempt hair. His reason returned to him when he lifted up his eyes to heaven and honoured the God of heaven and earth as Lord. What is this re-telling all about? It is concerning Nebuchadnezzar’s humiliation that leads to the discovery by God’s grace that God humbles the proud and none of us are outside of God’s domain to do as He pleases that we might know who He is. God is God and we are not. It is a starling witness of God’s grace that a ruler of Nebuchadnezzar’s ilk could be humbled and confess that God is Lord. Does this not suggest something of a transformation? Could this hold out hope that a powerful world leader can be reached by God? Yes it does. And if God reaches the loftiest and proud and can humble them, then He will reach us and show us what He is really like. Look to Jesus Christ today and humble yourself under His mighty hand. Amen. ![]() King Nebuchadnezzar made an image of gold that was as tall as the CN Tower. The width of it is curiously thin at the base and we wonder what to make of the Babylonian king’s activity. Why would he make this idol in the first place? Especially given his confession of who the true God is, why would he undertake a project of this nature? The ending of chapter two appears to give explanation for the king’s actions. He builds this tall statue which represents him because he is thinking of himself. Remember his dream? The statue is erected to glorify him in the dream as the head of gold and apparently the entire statue is gold not just the head! Indeed the whole image building exercise gets to the king’s head. He demands all the people of his kingdom to gather together at the dedication of this blasphemous structure and hear the sound of the music and fall down and worship the statue which represents his own glory. Apparently everyone does it, except three Jews. Daniel is curiously absent in this story. His three friends though who had been exalted at the end of chapter two are in focus. Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah are the names of the three Hebrews who are more famously known by their Babylonian names Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego. These three will not worship the image that Nebuchadnezzar sets up. Malicious reports get out that they are not bowing to this idol. Nebuchadnezzar is raging mad over their defiance and demands them to come into his presence. Upon their arrival Nebuchadnezzar seeks to intimidate the three into submission to him. He gives them the ultimatum of one last chance to bow down once the music band starts playing. The three Hebrew boys respond by saying that it is not necessary for them to reply to his silly demands. They declare that their God is able to deliver them from the threats of the fiery furnace. But even if they are not delivered from the fiery furnace the king is being served notice that they will not have their compliance with the idolatrous image that the king set up. Civil disobedience is on display here at its finest. The king is irate by now and there is no need for the music band to play because that is a lost cause. The only thing hotter than the furnace is the king’s rage. He commands the furnace to be cranked up seven times hotter than usual to let the boys know they have affronted the king. What is showed to us next is nothing short of a miracle. The boys go bound into the fire, apparently at the mercy of the king and his government. This is where the story usually ends. But the Bible is not that kind of story. It shows God showing up at the most interesting of times. The boys are no longer bound in the fire and they are free! Nebuchadnezzar is aghast with astonishment! He can’t believe his eyes. He explains to his men about what he sees. We threw in three but there is a fourth and he like the son of the gods! God shows up in the most intense persecution. God appears with His people in their trial and greatest hour of need. God does not fail or forsake! This is clarion call to the church to be faithful when everything is going wrong because God will make it right! Only hold on and be of good courage. Wait for your deliverance is near! Call on the name of the Lord and you shall be saved! The three Hebrew boys are called to come out of the fire and they are examined only to find out that the fire did not have any power over them, none at all. Nebuchadnezzar praises their God as the true God and promotes them in his kingdom. Coming out of that affliction and being vindicated shows God’s ways with the righteous. Jesus Christ is the embodiment of this in His cross and resurrection. Easter promises this hope! May the Lord who preserves and keeps His people grant you the power to be faithful in your witness to the Triune God. Amen. ![]() Nebuchadnezzar is a world leader whom God had a word. But how do you reach the king of the strongest empire on the planet, Babylon? Answer is you send him a dream. The king had a sleepless night (something that happens in Scripture not infrequently) and his spirit is distressed. The king comes up with a most interesting proposal to his fortune-tellers. He commands them to tell him what his dream is or else they will be ripped to smithereens. The soothsayers think he is being unreasonable and offer a good dose of common sense. They say that no human being can do what you’re asking so be fair. But Nebuchadnezzar’s word is firm and since they are stalling and scheming ways out of it the king orders their destruction. In the process of eradicating his wise men, one of them, Daniel by name is dragged to be destroyed. Daniel though tactfully asks what all the commotion is about. Arioch the king’s henchman explains to him the situation. Daniel went to the king asked for some time that he might show the king the interpretation. Strange enough, the king grants Daniel time. Daniel heads straight home and calls together his three friends, Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah. They had a prayer meeting and sought the mercy of God concerning this mystery. Sometime in the night the same God that sent Nebuchadnezzar the dream is the same one who sent Daniel the dream with its interpretation. Once Daniel receives it he takes it as an occasion to bless the Lord. His priorities are toward the Lord. Daniel ends up being rushed in to the king’s presence. After a brief exchange, Daniel wants to give a disclaimer before he goes ahead with the dream’s interpretation. It is simply that it is not about how wise a person I am but that God wants you to know the thoughts of your mind. The humility Daniel exudes with is a character of a righteous man in exile. He is humbled by all the events occurring and trusts God’s rule in human affairs. Daniel then proceeds to tell the king the dream. It is a tall image of a man made of various metals from head to toe. Along with this is the drama of a stone, uncut by human hands crushes the statue, but the stone became a great mountain and filled the whole earth. The following is the interpretation of the dream according to Daniel: Nebuchadnezzar you are given a kingdom to rule here on the earth by God. You are the head of gold. Two more kingdoms shall come after yours and then the fourth kingdom (Daniel spends most time on this one)… which has partly iron and partly clay mixed together. These two elements do no mix together and are weak. But God will set up a kingdom that will bring an end to all these kingdoms. In the end, God’s kingdom alone will last and reign supreme. O king, pay attention to that stone because it is not made with human hands and is divine in origin. It is this kingdom that breaks apart all the kingdoms of the world. God alone who is great has made this known to you so that you see what is to come. As sure as I am standing here it will come to pass. Nebuchadnezzar is floored. He praises the God of Daniel and gives gifts and offerings to him. The king’s confession is not one to overlook: truly your God is Lord of kings and reveals mysteries. Daniel is lifted up in the kingdom of Babylon along with his three friends. God is good. This dream is sent from God to show the enduring power of the kingdom of God and the futility and brittleness of human fiefdoms. This rock is the One that triumphs over all. God sends it, God relativizes, God endures because He is the King of this kingdom. Jesus Christ is the king of this kingdom who shall never pass away. Become His loyal servant today and come to life in the kingdom of God and believe the good news…Jesus Christ is our king, let us worship Him today. Amen. Saul & David represent heads of two kingdoms, the former being the weaker, the latter being the stronger. What is more, the weaker kingdom of Saul is crumbling and being decimated by the stronger kingdom of David is advancing and growing in strength day-by-day. This carries awesome significance for Christians today. The kingdom of God inaugurated by the son of David only grows stronger and stronger with the passing day. The kingdom of Saul is marked by decay, defeat and death. Each and every day the kingdom that is marked for destruction under Satan’s diabolical demise is doomed.
David’s sons are enumerated for us after this beginning and we hear for the first time about three of his sons whose characters will be fleshed out; Amnon, Absalom and Adonijah. Their dubious presence makes us wonder how stronger David’s kingdom will be with these three sons grow up. No sooner does this thought cross one’s mind we are given an even more puzzling description; Abner. He is said to strong in the kingdom of Saul. But we wonder how strong can someone be in a fledgling enterprise? What are we to make of this? On the one hand David’s house is growing strong but his sons will prove blameworthy and yet in Saul’s teetering kingdom we have a strong man portrayed named Abner with apparently no future. What is the solution? The answer is given to us in verse 12: defection. After Abner is accused of sleeping with one of Saul’s concubines, he leaves Saul’s kingdom and enters into covenant with David. The lies and pettiness are too foolish for Abner to continue on with so he departs. David’s terms are to bring one of his wives, Michal. Her character will end in infertility and barrenness. Abner’s is soon to unfold. Defection from the weaker kingdom to the stronger kingdom will require a strong man to do so. That strength is a resolve to not put up with wickedness any longer but to go where God’s future is headed. The destiny of people in David’s kingdom is one that looks ahead to that of promise in God’s salvation. This season of Lent calls on you to leave the waste of a weakened kingdom and pursue God’s presence in the stronger One Jesus Christ our Lord. Call on the name of the Lord and be saved. This Christmas come and find God's generous donation, the Christ child as the Lord lies in the manger. In gratitude, give all you can. Merry Christmas.
The third week of Advent approaches with a call to rejoice. It is one that assures us of the promise: God is with us. Is this not true before Christmas? He indeed is with us, even now in the hustle and bustle; boredom and daydreaming of our lives. So then, what is new concerning Christmas? If there is nothing new, then why celebrate? Why put up the wreath, the tree, the poinsettia or any other ornament? Why dust off the nativity scene for another year? If God is with us, what is the point? Christmas is an event that promises us that what took place in space-time history was our salvation. It is assurance for us who are prone to allowing our lives to be flooded and crowded and cluttered with things that are temporal, in other words, they have no lasting worth. Christmas is about God making room for Himself in a Bethlehem cave. God the Son is hiding out. The revelation is that God is with us and it is hidden for us in the revelation between ox and donkey. This is the mystery of the manger.
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A Word from the PastorGreetings to all of you in Christ's name. This blog is for you to consider in your walk with God. Shalom. Archives
November 2016
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