Monthly Archive for April, 2010

Book #6: Far As the Curse Is Found

The covenant formula–you will be my people and I shall be your God–formed the essence of the covenant relationship from the beginning (Ex. 6:7).

One of my tasks as a campus minister is to communicate the biblical story to students. What is God’s Word all about? What is God’s plan? What is the Gospel? How do we read God’s Word…study it…live it?

There are a few books on my 2010 reading list which help me towards this goal and Michael Williams Far As The Curse Is Found falls into that category. Perhaps the most helpful aspect of this particular book has been the emphasis on covenant as a lens through which we can see the drama of Scripture unfold.

God has indeed, completely of his own initiative, covenanted with his Creation…certainly including humanity. Sin is the disruptor of covenant…the barrier which makes it impossible for us to keep covenant with God. Through the cross of Christ, death is put to death and the righteousness of Christ becomes the righteousness in which we stand. The church becomes extremely significant as the community which cooperates with sovereign God to mediate His covenant to the world (the ministry of reconciliation which Paul speaks of).

Williams skillfully unpacks the idea of covenant in a way that makes sense from beginning to end. Within the context of this robust view of the Gospel…from Creation to Fall to Redemption to Consummation…God’s covenant relationship with Creation and all that He has done to maintain that covenant stirs the heart to respond in love and obedience. And as we live into this covenant relationship with God, we must be very careful not to divorce internals (heart) from externals (law/obedience) as Israel often did but look to the cross and the resurrection as our means for living as people of God.

Book #5: The Search for God and Guinness

My purpose in reading and posting about this book is not to promote a stout beer but a stout faith!

The story of Arthur Guinness and his faith is one that could inspire anyone to search for the secret of integrating vocation, calling, and work. As I disciple college students, one of the values I hope to instill in them is a grand vision for integrating faith with their academic and vocational pursuits.

For the past 250 years, members of the Guinness family have pursued various careers in brewing, banking, ministry/missions, etc. What most encourages me from their story is the redemptive use of wealth and commitment to leverage their passion and their lives for the benefit of others.

I began reading this book while flying to Atlanta for a marathon last month and nearly finished it on the plane. Even as I often see something as so-called  “secular” as running to be a spiritual endeavor, I was certainly challenged to think about brewing beer as a calling and a craft. This is probably not hard to believe given my own view of coffee, espresso, and hospitality.  Here are a few lines from the book which especially caught my attention:

“They did not see themselves as secular, but rather as called.”

“It seems that Patrick [Saint] understood godly hospitality and captured many an Irish tribal chieftain with his tasty beer before he won the man for God.”

“…the firm promised to hold the job of any man who enlisted in the armed forces and to pay him half his salary while he served.”

This last statement is one of hundreds of examples of corporate responsibility which Guinness pioneered from the early days. From providing health care, housing, financial assistance, and many other services during the most devastating times in Dublin, the brewery set amazingly high standards for the treatment of employees and their families.

Mansfield’s book tells a great story of faith and craft while inspiring one to search more carefully for God in his/her vocation as well.

The Nature of Church

This particular Sunday morning found me experiencing a couple of different expressions of church. Although they were both pretty large gatherings, the style of worship was quite different as was their impact on me personally and spiritually.

At the first worship gathering, I saw some old friends and connected with people in a way that was familiar, comfortable, etc. Since I was meeting up with a student and his mom, it was also a great opportunity to build relationships and connect with someone that I am discipling. During that service, the pastor brought some challenging and inspirational thoughts about ‘church’ from Hebrews 10. Interestingly, embedded in this passage is a set of verses which I’ve been recently trying to commit to memory.

“Let us draw near to God with a sincere heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts psrinkled to cleanse us from a guilty conscience and having our bodies washed with pure water. Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful.”

These couple of verses (vv.22-23 of chapter 10) have been part of my “freedom journey” over the past few weeks as I continue the process of living completely in the awareness of God’s grace and not out of any ability to live righteously on my own.

But the encouraging words the pastor shared today emphasized what we can experience as church based on the reconciling and priestly work Christ finished on the cross for us. A priest builds a bridge between people and God. And Jesus did that once and for all so that we have direct access (in the context of community) to God. This access doesn’t legitimize the individual attempt to live a life of faith, but should increase our awareness of what it means to belong to one another IN Christ.

Often times, pastors come across as desperately trying to convince people to come to church for trivial reasons:

  • for the sake of numbers
  • or to sustain the church financially
  • perhaps to feed the pastor’s ego for “success”
  • etc

But this morning I heard a passionate and scriptural call for believers to be engaged in the community of faith. It’s a two-way street. We don’t just go to church for what we can get out of it, or because we desperately need it even. And in fact, when we think of it in terms of “going to church” we’ve already betrayed a lack of understanding in what it means to BE the church…to intimately BELONG with a group of people who share in this transforming journey of relationship to God through faith in Christ.