1. Foster says spiritual disciplines are not designed to be ends in themselves., but are intended to facilitate a person's journey into greater freedom in living a Christ-like life. How did your practice of the disciplines this semester (either some in particular or all together) help you grow in your faith and obedience to God?
Solitude definitely helped me grow a lot spiritually. Becoming detached from the world and focusing on God is very important in my life. Being able to separate time out for just you and God is a tough thing to do. Making time to be with the all powerful and holy God is also a scary thing but doing it is very important.
Submission probably brought me closest to God. Having faith to trust God with such a mundane thing was very difficult. However I realized how it was necessary and how much it gave me freedom from sin. Being obedient is all about submission because truly we cannot control anything. It is really all in God's hands. When we take away ourselves and give it all to God, then, he is truly glorified.
2. What were some of the distractions or hindrances that kept you from practicing or practicing to the fullest, the assigned disciplines this semester? What does this show you about yourself? How do you plan to address this area (or these areas) of struggle?
Praying was difficult for me because I wouldn't really think about it a whole lot. I had time to pray but I just couldn't seem to remember to do it. I think about God and talk to him a lot but I don't really fold my hands and pray a whole ton. I found it easy to pray in my car when I'm alone the most. But I still got distracted by having such a busy life. Whenever something good or bad happened I could remember to thank God or talk to God but setting a time just for prayer was very difficult. This shows that I am a pretty busy person. I need to take more time out of my day and just pray to God and read my Bible. Focusing on God just sometimes or when I feel like it, is not a good relationship. I should be reliant on him all the time and give him time everyday.
My mind is probably my biggest hindrance. When I'm at work I think about my problems a lot more and that doesn't help them go away. I'm constantly analyzing things and thinking about how to make things better. Sometimes relaxing is almost uncontrollable. Through these disciplines I have realized that I am prone to anxiety and being overly analytic. I really need to trust God more and give up my cares to him. Solitude and prayer can definitely help with this. Along with Simplicity.
3. Identify three disciplines you think mesh together well and explain how you see them interrelating. How do you plan to practice them together?
Simplicity, submission and prayer definitely go hand in hand. Time with God leads to prayer. Simplicity brings a focus to your life and submission makes that focus under God. You can only have a good focus if you submit to God's will. Prayer is acting out simplicity and prayer also creates simplicity. All three of these work together to bring you closer to God. I plan to practice them by doing them all at once. When I pray, I will pray for guidance and focus. I have to submit to God in order to be guided correctly. Submitting to God may also require me to detract from the worldly wants and desires.
4. Identify one discipline you would urge a new believer to practice. How would you instruct them in the discipline? Why do you think this discipline is especially well-suited to the formation of a new believer?
New believers should definitely practice study. Study is one of the most important things a Christian can do. I would do this by first picking up my bible and reading part of it. Could be a chapter or a few verses but it shouldn't be random either. You may have to research the different purposes behind different books of the bible to understand where to start but it is important. Then I would study that section over and over. Repeat this a lot so you may understand it better. If you are still not satisfied pick up a commentary and read what a good theologian thinks about it. Study is important because that's how we learn some of the most important characteristics of God. Learning God's characteristics means we can understand his will for our lives all the more. A believer cannot grow without knowing who God is.
5. Spiritual disciplines fortify believers against some of the universal struggles and weaknesses all Christians battle against. Identify and describe an area of weakness you observe in Kuyper College student population. What spiritual discipline, if corporately practiced, would target this area of weakness and why?
The biggest weakness that I see at Kuyper would be the lack of desire for outreach. We are a community of believers and are constantly teaching ourselves. However we are called to make disciples and if there is not a desire to do this, then there is a huge problem. The only discipline I can relate this to besides service is to study. We need to know God's will more. Jesus had twelve disciples. These disciples went out two by two and spread the gospel. Studying God's word can give us the desire to do this. If we really wanted to know God and do his will because we love them. Then we would see it in his word and be convicted and then share the gospel. We study the bible a lot at Kuyper. It is a good thing but it can also be a bad thing. Too much of it means we ignore some of it. In order to realize what we need to do, we need to reflect on the word. This means to understand it and apply it. True understanding is applying it to our lives. Also we need to know humility so we can be taught what to do. Many of us can be too prideful to realize our faults and what things we need to do better. We can be too prideful to listen to Jesus.
6. What advice would you give to the next class of spiritual formation students at Kuyper College who will be practicing the disciplines?
I would suggest that they take these disciplines seriously. Learning how to further your walk with God is the most important aspect of our lives. No one is responsible for your growth and change but yourself and God. Learning from others is nice and helps but actually making your faith your own is the Christian life. Doing these disciplines will help you! Also read the Foster book a lot. He is a really smart guy and will teach you a lot. I think the quizzes should have been on Foster instead of Sittser but that is just me. Understand these disciplines well and apply them better. Figure out how to apply your theology you have learned to these disciplines and you will be very happy in the rest of your life.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Solitude
Solitude left a lot to be desired this week. I kept wanting the quiet. Wanting to be pulled away by God and just separate myself from the rest of life. It was difficult to do this. All week I've been working towards finishing my classes and other homework. There was plenty to do all week. Also with a couple things growing in my mind, just made it harder.
Solitude is really just a state of mind. Being able to breakaway from other people in order to listen to God is solitude's true purpose. Sometimes we give so much of our lives to other people, we really don't have anything to give to God. We exhaust ourselves spiritually by sharing ourselves with others. We forget what is really important and lose our true focus.
This week was all about purpose. Thinking about and putting time and energy into what is really important, is what I focused on this week. There was a lot to be anxious about outside of my studies and my work. My life has gotten really busy really fast. Some crazy somewhat miraculous things has happened. It has been weighing on my mind so much.
So, instead of worrying or dwelling on these things I focused on what God wants me to do. In my last post I talked about how things had to be given to God. That was a part of submission. Solitude was carrying through with that submission. Whenever I grew weary, I just praised and prayed to God. It was tough but it was very spiritually filling.
Solitude is about denying yourself and taking up what God wants in your life. You can find freedom in taking away your selfish nature and taking on God's will, God's desires. It's sort of a matter of perspective. If you look at the world through your own ambition you won't get far and your will, will be drained from you. God fills you spiritually when you rely on his eyes to interpret the things you see.
Practice solitude, because it is important. Without it you won't understand what is really going on. You can't fully realize the truth until you step back and consider what God knows.
Solitude is really just a state of mind. Being able to breakaway from other people in order to listen to God is solitude's true purpose. Sometimes we give so much of our lives to other people, we really don't have anything to give to God. We exhaust ourselves spiritually by sharing ourselves with others. We forget what is really important and lose our true focus.
This week was all about purpose. Thinking about and putting time and energy into what is really important, is what I focused on this week. There was a lot to be anxious about outside of my studies and my work. My life has gotten really busy really fast. Some crazy somewhat miraculous things has happened. It has been weighing on my mind so much.
So, instead of worrying or dwelling on these things I focused on what God wants me to do. In my last post I talked about how things had to be given to God. That was a part of submission. Solitude was carrying through with that submission. Whenever I grew weary, I just praised and prayed to God. It was tough but it was very spiritually filling.
Solitude is about denying yourself and taking up what God wants in your life. You can find freedom in taking away your selfish nature and taking on God's will, God's desires. It's sort of a matter of perspective. If you look at the world through your own ambition you won't get far and your will, will be drained from you. God fills you spiritually when you rely on his eyes to interpret the things you see.
Practice solitude, because it is important. Without it you won't understand what is really going on. You can't fully realize the truth until you step back and consider what God knows.
Monday, November 26, 2012
Submission
Submission is about surrendering all we have to God. It's not just about one thing specifically. It's about everything. Submission is when we decide that God's will is bigger than ours. When we fully give what we want to control to him.
However I think submission is more than that. It's isn't just about giving God everything. When we take things as our own we sin. Our desire is to be in control. We want to be more powerful than God and when we think we can control it we sink into idolatry. We want so much for ourselves that we aren't really worshiping God. It is idolatry to not submit everything to God.
This week in practicing this discipline. I realized how much I have been practicing idolatry. Specifically with one thing. Something that is so important to me, I had to protect it. I had to control it. It was mine and nobody was going to take that away from me. I never even realized I wasn't giving it to God. I thought I was giving it to him but the truth was I couldn't even talk about it. I couldn't pray about it. I was practicing idolatry.
The funny thing about not submitting to God is you everything is submitted to God. We only think that it is ours. That we can keep it for our own. There is nothing in this universe that can be ours, it is all God's. So I wonder if God laughs at us when we try to make things our own. When we try to steal it away from him.
God showed me that it isn't mine. He took it from me. Then I realized I was trying to keep it from him. I no longer had control. I never had control. He showed me what was his and what was mine. Then my struggle was different. With the full realization that it was God's, I had to deal with that. Obviously I had not been giving it to him and when it was taken away I was crushed.
Only God could pick me up.
I had to do things this week that stretched me to trust God even more than ever. To put my actions in God's hands. I didn't know how to act or what decisions to make. God walked me through it and I don't know why. I had been so selfish but finally trusting God with it gave me confidence. Confidence from him and in him. I couldn't do it without him and he showed me that.
This discipline was difficult. It was very stressful. I may have made it harder than it was. It's tough to give everything to God. We want it for ourselves. We have to have it. It might go bad if we don't do something about it. Not if we really trust God.
However I think submission is more than that. It's isn't just about giving God everything. When we take things as our own we sin. Our desire is to be in control. We want to be more powerful than God and when we think we can control it we sink into idolatry. We want so much for ourselves that we aren't really worshiping God. It is idolatry to not submit everything to God.
This week in practicing this discipline. I realized how much I have been practicing idolatry. Specifically with one thing. Something that is so important to me, I had to protect it. I had to control it. It was mine and nobody was going to take that away from me. I never even realized I wasn't giving it to God. I thought I was giving it to him but the truth was I couldn't even talk about it. I couldn't pray about it. I was practicing idolatry.
The funny thing about not submitting to God is you everything is submitted to God. We only think that it is ours. That we can keep it for our own. There is nothing in this universe that can be ours, it is all God's. So I wonder if God laughs at us when we try to make things our own. When we try to steal it away from him.
God showed me that it isn't mine. He took it from me. Then I realized I was trying to keep it from him. I no longer had control. I never had control. He showed me what was his and what was mine. Then my struggle was different. With the full realization that it was God's, I had to deal with that. Obviously I had not been giving it to him and when it was taken away I was crushed.
Only God could pick me up.
I had to do things this week that stretched me to trust God even more than ever. To put my actions in God's hands. I didn't know how to act or what decisions to make. God walked me through it and I don't know why. I had been so selfish but finally trusting God with it gave me confidence. Confidence from him and in him. I couldn't do it without him and he showed me that.
This discipline was difficult. It was very stressful. I may have made it harder than it was. It's tough to give everything to God. We want it for ourselves. We have to have it. It might go bad if we don't do something about it. Not if we really trust God.
Friday, November 16, 2012
Simplicity isn't so simple
Simplicity is about a freedom from anxiety. To cast all your worries on God and trust in him. This is of the most importance. I couldn't walk through life if I didn't have anything to trust in. If there's not a concrete slab to cling to the house falls down. We have to trust that God can be our rock and know that he cares and sustains us.
I'm probably one of the more analytic persons you've ever met. It is really hard to do this discipline. I can trust God with somethings but others I struggle really hard to. Currently life has been more difficult and I know the only way to get through it is trusting God. But obviously that has been really difficult. So I have been trying to do this discipline but I know I have been failing at it. This isn't just a discipline, this is a life learning ideal concept.
Simplicity is such a broad topic. Do we trust God with money? Do we trust him with decisions? What about time or our reputation? All these things take time to develop. Just turning off the wondering switch is almost nearly impossible sometimes. We want something so bad but we can't give it to God. He might take it away. Which one do we love most?
I'm probably one of the more analytic persons you've ever met. It is really hard to do this discipline. I can trust God with somethings but others I struggle really hard to. Currently life has been more difficult and I know the only way to get through it is trusting God. But obviously that has been really difficult. So I have been trying to do this discipline but I know I have been failing at it. This isn't just a discipline, this is a life learning ideal concept.
Simplicity is such a broad topic. Do we trust God with money? Do we trust him with decisions? What about time or our reputation? All these things take time to develop. Just turning off the wondering switch is almost nearly impossible sometimes. We want something so bad but we can't give it to God. He might take it away. Which one do we love most?
Monday, November 12, 2012
Study
It's important to read our Bibles. God's word brings us life and fills us. Usually it is difficult to find time to do it. However we definitely have time to read it. Sometimes we think we don't have time time to read. We are pretty rebellious followers.
The truth is we don't want to read sometimes. We don't have the desire to because we don't want to hear what God has to say. We think we have it all together or we know its going the wrong way and don't want to admit it. I struggled with this while doing the discipline of study.
Reading 1st Corinthians 13 over and over again really cut me to the core. Finding out what real love is revealed my sin. It showed how I have been selfish, prideful and arrogant. It revealed things about myself I am afraid to admit but had to admit them anyway. I have to tell God about it even though he already knows what I'm thinking.
Admitting to God that he is right is what he calls us to do. It's not something we can do without him changing our heart first and being inclined to his will for our lives. Therefore we need to surrender our desires and choices to him. Study can only truly be done when we are focused on God. However we seem to only be focused on ourselves.
We go through our busy days and are stuck in our comfort zones, not actually focusing on God. When we study God's word we are made aware of his presence. He gives us strength to go about our day and concentrate on what is truly important.
Studying god's word is the only way we get a direct word from God. Why would we ever want to reject that opportunity? Isn't he the one who controls the universe? Why can't we trust him? It is true that the Bible hasn't always been around and communicating with God had to be done in different ways, and all those ways are really important. However many have died and sacrificed their whole life so they could spread the physical presence of the Bible. If we take for granted this ability to read God's word, then we are basically rejecting God's gifts. We need to read God's word daily because he is our daily life line.
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
My Story
When I was a little kid I remember my grandma reading the
bible and praying with and for me. I also remember the many pictures and
figures of angels all around her house. I don’t ever remember a time when my
family wasn’t convicted of God’s existence. I wouldn’t say my parents or my
sister were very spiritual when I was growing up. We went to church a lot and I
think we were generally “good” people. We tried to be the morally sound family.
I like to think that anyways. However I remember when I was about 7 or 8 and
asking my best friend if he believed in God. He said he didn’t know and I still
don’t know if he does to this day. My other friend did and still does. He was
my neighbor and we spent a lot of time at his house where I noticed that his
mother was pretty spiritual. I knew they both went to church and everything but
I never really talked to them about it. The only people I really talked to
about God, was my grandma and my father.
We
stopped going to church a whole lot when our church burned down. It was only
half of it but it was the sanctuary. Lightning had struck it and caused a fire.
It was weird because I was at the church the day it caught fire and apparently
only shortly after I had left did it burn down. I don’t know exactly what the
purpose was behind this but I remember not going to church for a while after
that. There wasn’t really a church to go to. We went to a few churches and
found ourselves at Peace Reformed Church of Middleville. We only went once and
still had a season of church absence. One day I met my friend Jon through my
best friend Josh. He invited me to go to youth group with him so I started
going pretty consistently. 5th
and 6th grade youth group wasn’t very exciting and since our middle
school and elementary schools were split at 5th and 6th
grade, it was kind of weird. I remember playing games and stuff but that is
about it. I wasn’t too spiritual yet and probably considered a pretty bad kid.
I remember in middle school my mouth being pretty rotten even though I hardly
ever talked. Middle school was a tough time for me but made a big spiritual
change in my life. I remember going on a trip in middle school called Acquire
the Fire and there I struggled through salvation and tried to commit to Christ.
However I still felt sinful and very insecure about my salvation.
In middle
school I knew that my faith was important but it still wasn’t number one. High
school changed a lot of that. I still was pretty reserved and quiet entering in
high school. But I was working at cleaning my life up. I also knew how important
it was to learn about the Bible. My youth pastor was fantastic and I owe a lot
of my knowledge to him. He was going for his masters and knew what he was
talking about. He’s probably one of the smartest guys I’ve ever met. I remember
looking up to other leaders in the youth group too but he was probably the one
who taught me the most. Also the most important thing in high school was trying
to be nice to people and inviting them to youth group. I don’t know how
evangelical that made us, however. It was became a struggle between knowledge
for yourself and actually caring if the gospel was important enough to spread.
As a follower I still struggled with my salvation. I wasn’t 100% sure I was
saved and I remember having many talks about salvation with many of the
leaders.
One day
I had to make a decision. I had to decide if I was going to look to Christ and
live for him or fall away and turn to something else. I knew what was on the
line but I had to decide if God was real, if I wanted him or another useless
thing. As I remember this time in my life I look at it as being so easy but I
know it was hard. Now it seems like it was such a simple decision but at the
time it wasn’t. I know that God was with me and pushing me through the thought
processes to salvation but at the time it scared the crap out of me. I had been
a follower for years but was I really committed? Now I look back and think that
I was but this still was a very pinnacle time for my life. At last I had chosen
to follow Christ. Next the work followed.
Choosing
Christ is not just about being saved it’s about desiring what he wants and
living a changed life. I struggled with this most of all. Finding my
satisfaction in him was very difficult. My sinful nature always pushes for
itself. Nothing really excited me about Christianity except a few things. I really
liked the salvation doctrines like Calvinism and such but none of that was
enough to change my desires and actually make me want to spread the gospel. I
knew it was important but I did not take seriously how important it was. I
struggled with this until another time of change came in my life.
Finally
I had graduated high school. I decided to go to Ferris for a degree in
Pharmacy. This was a radical change in my life. There was no more youth group,
no more youth leader or youth group friends. They were still around but I didn’t
see them every day. I finally had to make my faith my own and learn to be a
Christian in a radically different environment. This is where I met my good
friend Andy who I started going to a college age ministry with. College was
crazy and the His House ministry was the only thing that kept it bearable.
There were so many pagans or uneducated Christians it was ridiculous. My friend
Andy made this easier to understand and helped me develop my faith in this
weird environment. We had accountability groups and Christians who desired
Christ more than I had ever seen. It was a great place to be and really
challenged my faith. There I learned a true passion for sharing the gospel. I
actually had finally learned how to effectively live out my faith in real life.
This was a time of true change even though it was some of the hardest times.
When I
left Ferris I came to Kuyper to develop my faith more and to learn more about
the Bible so I could effectively advance in spreading the gospel. And here I am
right now. We’ve rewrote a college age ministry and I’ve learned so much about
doctrine and theology. I now can see what is really important and how to be
effective at spreading the gospel. Now I lead a bible study every other Thursday
and try to make our college age ministry effective. I have fully come to know
what it means to be saved and find full assurance in my salvation. Even though
sometimes my actions are not like Christ I still find satisfaction in knowing
that I am his and have a developing relationship with him. The only real
question I have now, as a graduating senior, is where to go from here. The next
chapter in my life will definitely be another life changing experience and now
I know that is something to look forward to.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Fasting isn't very fast at all.
Fasting is unusual. It's different. I don't know if any of my really close friends actually do it. They never say if they do at least. But that's probably a good thing. I have fasted before but I tried not to tell anyone about it. I think that's also a good thing. It's also probably not the best thing to brag about your fasting. It' something between you and God. It's not something to be boasted about. No one wants to hear how much better you are then them! However we do want to know about what God is doing in your life. It's kind of complicated.
Anyways, fasting is interesting. What good does it actually do? Does it do any good at all? It sounds pretty selfish to me. I think Americans in general struggle with the idea of fasting. We struggle with the idea of self discipline. To tell ourselves no to something is to deny one's self and that doesn't make any sense. Why not just give yourself everything you wanted? My heart and sinful nature knows what is best right? A wise man once said the heart is deceitful above all things. A slightly less wise man said, "Whenever I’m about to do something I think, would an idiot do that? And if they would I do not do that thing." One of these men correctly understood how our hearts work.
This week I did a little fasting. My college group decided it would be a good idea to go down and hand out sandwiches to the homeless people in Grand Rapids. I'm not bragging I'm just stating a fact. This happened. This was also really out of my comfort zone. It wasn't actually about the peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, it was about sharing the gospel. The sandwiches were just a conversation starter. But anyways, I decided it would be a good idea to fast. These people were hungry so I was going to be hungry too. I was trying to put myself in their position, hoping God would make me understand and feel the same way they did. Also it reminded me of why I was there and gave me focus. I wanted a PB&J so bad by the end of it. I could sympathize with those who asked for three. These people were out on the streets and needed help. I could only partially relate to that. This experience opened my eyes greatly.
I think fasting is good for two things. One is putting all your focus on God and taking it off of yourself. With a constant reminder of hunger, we can realize how much God gives us and how much we owe him and can't repay. This act should be worshipful of God. It's putting away your selfish desires and taking up selflessness.
Secondly, fasting is about being disciplined. People really struggle with this. Taking away the idol of yourself and replacing it with the glorification of God is the most important thing a Christian can do. We are constantly struggling against our sinful nature. We are inherently evil and trying to change that is what Christ wants for us. He ultimately wants us to be saved from ourselves. Only God has the power to truly change us from evil and fasting is an example of how we are changed. It is an image of what Christ did in the desert. He fasted for 40 days. He has given us a good example to follow.
Thanks,
David
Prayer is difficult
Prayer has always been a complicated subject for me. It's difficult to think we can talk to God and that he hears us. It's a problem because we are so sinful and he isn't. So how does that make sense? Does God actually hear you if we are so full of sin?
But it's true, he does actually listen. But why don't we always get the answers we want? It's probably because we are so sinful. Is God just a jerk because he doesn't answer us the way we want? What if he actually gave us what we wanted all the time? Wouldn't he just be giving us into our own vices? I don't think God answers our prayers the way we want all the time because he has to love us, because he wants to love us.
What about all the other evils then, shouldn't they be taken care of? Yes we can pray for every evil in the world and God hears our prayers but why does he let them happen? Is it because they must happen? Is God teaching us to rely on him. I think prayer is definite result and sign of us relying on God and trusting in him. Coming to God with our decisions, wants, and needs shows God how much we love him and trust him.
I have never been one of those "prayer warriors" or one who would volunteer to pray a lot in group settings. Corporate prayer has always been a tough thing for me. Even when I am not the one praying, sometimes my thoughts wander, sometimes it's a real problem. But lately I have been praying more in groups and for longer times. This past week I went with a college group to pray in front of the abortion clinic. I had never really done something like that before. It was public and it was against something that's overwhelming to think about. At first it was kind of scary but I prayed about it and God eased my anxiety. Yet we were still honked at and yelled at on the street. But I don't think that was the hardest part of it.
We had to talk to God for an hour. Each one of us got a turn but still an hour? I could list off all the prayer concerns in way less than that very easily. But it was about the hour and not exactly how we prayed. Coming up with something new to pray about was difficult however praying about the same thing over and over again was really important. It also didn't turn into a competition for who is the most creative in prayer. No it was about praying to God and crying out to him for what is the most important thing. Saying it again and again, begging God to hear our prayers and answer them. I think God desires discipline in these subjects, especially prayer and fasting. Paul says he prays continually for the saints and that we should also. Many times in the Old Testament prophets have done crazy difficult things while trying to pray to God. I think this is a definite need and we forget about that need.
Thanks,
Dave
But it's true, he does actually listen. But why don't we always get the answers we want? It's probably because we are so sinful. Is God just a jerk because he doesn't answer us the way we want? What if he actually gave us what we wanted all the time? Wouldn't he just be giving us into our own vices? I don't think God answers our prayers the way we want all the time because he has to love us, because he wants to love us.
What about all the other evils then, shouldn't they be taken care of? Yes we can pray for every evil in the world and God hears our prayers but why does he let them happen? Is it because they must happen? Is God teaching us to rely on him. I think prayer is definite result and sign of us relying on God and trusting in him. Coming to God with our decisions, wants, and needs shows God how much we love him and trust him.
I have never been one of those "prayer warriors" or one who would volunteer to pray a lot in group settings. Corporate prayer has always been a tough thing for me. Even when I am not the one praying, sometimes my thoughts wander, sometimes it's a real problem. But lately I have been praying more in groups and for longer times. This past week I went with a college group to pray in front of the abortion clinic. I had never really done something like that before. It was public and it was against something that's overwhelming to think about. At first it was kind of scary but I prayed about it and God eased my anxiety. Yet we were still honked at and yelled at on the street. But I don't think that was the hardest part of it.
We had to talk to God for an hour. Each one of us got a turn but still an hour? I could list off all the prayer concerns in way less than that very easily. But it was about the hour and not exactly how we prayed. Coming up with something new to pray about was difficult however praying about the same thing over and over again was really important. It also didn't turn into a competition for who is the most creative in prayer. No it was about praying to God and crying out to him for what is the most important thing. Saying it again and again, begging God to hear our prayers and answer them. I think God desires discipline in these subjects, especially prayer and fasting. Paul says he prays continually for the saints and that we should also. Many times in the Old Testament prophets have done crazy difficult things while trying to pray to God. I think this is a definite need and we forget about that need.
Thanks,
Dave
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
What is meditation?
Hello again. This week I was supposed to study meditation and actually take time to meditate, and so I did. Before I begin explaining the experience I think it's important to know what meditation is. I didn't really know when we first talked about it in class. I thought it was just a time to sit around and think about stuff, and I figured that sounds really boring or I could just get caught up in so many thoughts that I would eventually go crazy. My friend Jon Delger put it that meditation was about going into the woods and dancing naked with the fairies. I think there's something wrong with all of those approaches.
"The essence of meditation can only be truly achieved while naked, I feel as though clothing hinders my communication with the divine aura. Clothing keeps the bad in and keeps God out, which is counter productive towards the genuine practice of the discipline. Nakedness on the other hand allows God the freedom to enter into your mind without being hindered by fabric." says Josh Rumbarger. I think there is something wrong with that approach also.
Coming to God in a time of peace and tranquility is not about how you do it but what goes on when it's happening. Meditation is spending a quiet time with God and focusing on the communication between yourself, the Holy Spirit and God the Father. (Jesus is in there too because he is our mediator) I think it's really important that this time is focused only on that relationship.
I was talking to my friend the other day about being personal with Jesus. They said a book they read (it wasn't the Bible) described Jesus so personally it made it so much easier to focus on him in her devotions and prayer. Understanding who Jesus was and who God is, is really important if we are going to communicate and build our relationship with him. This is also why meditation is so important. It focuses on how you view God and how you apply that to your life.
In my time times of meditation this week I found it easiest to meditate while I was at work, driving my car, or even sitting in my car talking to God. My Ipod has recently broke so having these times with God have become easier to find. Distractions should probably be left for a different post so I'm not going to touch on that yet. So with all distractions aside, I really found these times effective when talking with God.
When I found time to meditate, I laid it all down in front of God. I gave him all my problems and said "I don't really want to deal with this any more, you can deal with them." It wasn't really all that difficult to do. The difficult part was understanding that I still had to deal with those things after I gave them all to God. He wasn't like a magical genie that took all my problems away. No instead he just made them more apparent. Yes I had been screwing up and God does forgive me for those sins but I still have to deal with the consequences. I still need to struggle to fight the good fight even and take it all on personally. But there's an irresistible calm that I got from meditating. Realizing that God is bigger than anything I can give to him really gives you the confidence that you can work through it. No matter what happens God knows what's going on and it will be for his glory.
So next time you look upon meditation as something a crazy person would do, rethink it, and try and do it. Give everything to God and listen for his response. You maybe surprised in what you will find.
Cya next week.
Dave
"The essence of meditation can only be truly achieved while naked, I feel as though clothing hinders my communication with the divine aura. Clothing keeps the bad in and keeps God out, which is counter productive towards the genuine practice of the discipline. Nakedness on the other hand allows God the freedom to enter into your mind without being hindered by fabric." says Josh Rumbarger. I think there is something wrong with that approach also.
Coming to God in a time of peace and tranquility is not about how you do it but what goes on when it's happening. Meditation is spending a quiet time with God and focusing on the communication between yourself, the Holy Spirit and God the Father. (Jesus is in there too because he is our mediator) I think it's really important that this time is focused only on that relationship.
I was talking to my friend the other day about being personal with Jesus. They said a book they read (it wasn't the Bible) described Jesus so personally it made it so much easier to focus on him in her devotions and prayer. Understanding who Jesus was and who God is, is really important if we are going to communicate and build our relationship with him. This is also why meditation is so important. It focuses on how you view God and how you apply that to your life.
In my time times of meditation this week I found it easiest to meditate while I was at work, driving my car, or even sitting in my car talking to God. My Ipod has recently broke so having these times with God have become easier to find. Distractions should probably be left for a different post so I'm not going to touch on that yet. So with all distractions aside, I really found these times effective when talking with God.
When I found time to meditate, I laid it all down in front of God. I gave him all my problems and said "I don't really want to deal with this any more, you can deal with them." It wasn't really all that difficult to do. The difficult part was understanding that I still had to deal with those things after I gave them all to God. He wasn't like a magical genie that took all my problems away. No instead he just made them more apparent. Yes I had been screwing up and God does forgive me for those sins but I still have to deal with the consequences. I still need to struggle to fight the good fight even and take it all on personally. But there's an irresistible calm that I got from meditating. Realizing that God is bigger than anything I can give to him really gives you the confidence that you can work through it. No matter what happens God knows what's going on and it will be for his glory.
So next time you look upon meditation as something a crazy person would do, rethink it, and try and do it. Give everything to God and listen for his response. You maybe surprised in what you will find.
Cya next week.
Dave
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Confession can't be what it seems.
Confession really always gets a bad rap. The one scene I always think of is from the movie The Ringer. Johnny Knoxville is at the confession booth telling the priest that he is rigging the Special Olympics. Instead of saying his sins are forgiven, the priest throws him out of the church and calls him a sick man, or something like that. Wouldn't that be unfortunate if only some sins were actually forgiven? But that simply isn't true. Christ forgives all our sins.
Does he actually forgive all our sins? The answer is yes, but this brings up another problem. If we have these sins and we keep asking for forgiveness for the same sin, will it really be forgiven again? Is it really repentance from sin if we go on and keep sinning?
John Calvin defined sin as this, "a true conversion of our life to God, proceeding from a serious fear of God, and consisting in the mortification of the flesh and of the old man, and in the vivification of the Spirit."
Repentance is turning away from sin, it's the only way that we can show that we are truly converted. This disheartens me because I wonder what about those that fall back into sin and keep doing it and have to repent all over again. Are they really converted? Are their sins forgiven or do they not actually want the forgiveness because they don't try hard enough to stop sinning? The fact of the matter is that Jesus calls us to repentance and Christ forgives sins through his death on the cross.
Confession, I think, is a primary part of repentance. It is of utmost importance. The first thing we do when confessing is examining the conscience. We must first examine ourselves and see our sin. God does have rules and laws that he wants us to follow in accordance with his being. Not following God's moral will, leads to sin. If we don't understand that we don't know our sin and we can't confess. There isn't anything to confess.
Once we realize our sin, the direct product of that is sorrow for sin. We regret the sin we took up against the almighty God. Feeling regret or sorrow is the product of a changed heart. If you don't realize it was a bad thing and want to turn away from it then you obviously are not confessing or repenting correctly.
The tricky part with confession is, who do you confess your sin to? Yes confessing your sin to God is really important. But I think that can get repetitive. We can start to not feel bad about sin because God's so far away and we can just think, "Oh I'm sorry I won't do that again," and immediate proceed to do it anyways.
Martin Luther one of the great fathers of the reformation against Catholicism loved the confession booth. He loved having someone to tell his sins to. He knew however that the priest couldn't actually forgive his sins but the reaffirmation that his sins are actually forgiven by Christ was always joyful. Luther would be so convicted of his sin that sometimes he would be told that the small things he analyzed weren't really all that important.
Luther is one of the reasons why I think confessing our sins to another human being is really important. Confessing our sin to other people not only can help us realize it has been forgiven but keep us accountable to not keep on sinning. The other night my friends and I went for a walk and hung out at a gazebo on a lake just down the road. There we confessed what had been troubling us. One after another we talked about what we struggle with. Each one of us seemed to have a big dilemma in our life. Nobody knew how to fix it but getting it out there and talking about it seemed to help. Through confession we realize were our real faults are. Openly confessing the things we deal with on a regular basis really makes us think through them and it helps make clear what we should do to fix it. Also that other person we confess to, can and hopefully will keep us accountable. Accountability is really important because sin is so overwhelming and consistent, that we need something consistently pulling us away from it.
So next time you find yourself caught in the same routine of asking for forgiveness over and over again, just ask a friend to listen or find a mentor. It really helps and I promise it will make you feel better. :)
Does he actually forgive all our sins? The answer is yes, but this brings up another problem. If we have these sins and we keep asking for forgiveness for the same sin, will it really be forgiven again? Is it really repentance from sin if we go on and keep sinning?
John Calvin defined sin as this, "a true conversion of our life to God, proceeding from a serious fear of God, and consisting in the mortification of the flesh and of the old man, and in the vivification of the Spirit."
Repentance is turning away from sin, it's the only way that we can show that we are truly converted. This disheartens me because I wonder what about those that fall back into sin and keep doing it and have to repent all over again. Are they really converted? Are their sins forgiven or do they not actually want the forgiveness because they don't try hard enough to stop sinning? The fact of the matter is that Jesus calls us to repentance and Christ forgives sins through his death on the cross.
Confession, I think, is a primary part of repentance. It is of utmost importance. The first thing we do when confessing is examining the conscience. We must first examine ourselves and see our sin. God does have rules and laws that he wants us to follow in accordance with his being. Not following God's moral will, leads to sin. If we don't understand that we don't know our sin and we can't confess. There isn't anything to confess.
Once we realize our sin, the direct product of that is sorrow for sin. We regret the sin we took up against the almighty God. Feeling regret or sorrow is the product of a changed heart. If you don't realize it was a bad thing and want to turn away from it then you obviously are not confessing or repenting correctly.
The tricky part with confession is, who do you confess your sin to? Yes confessing your sin to God is really important. But I think that can get repetitive. We can start to not feel bad about sin because God's so far away and we can just think, "Oh I'm sorry I won't do that again," and immediate proceed to do it anyways.
Martin Luther one of the great fathers of the reformation against Catholicism loved the confession booth. He loved having someone to tell his sins to. He knew however that the priest couldn't actually forgive his sins but the reaffirmation that his sins are actually forgiven by Christ was always joyful. Luther would be so convicted of his sin that sometimes he would be told that the small things he analyzed weren't really all that important.
Luther is one of the reasons why I think confessing our sins to another human being is really important. Confessing our sin to other people not only can help us realize it has been forgiven but keep us accountable to not keep on sinning. The other night my friends and I went for a walk and hung out at a gazebo on a lake just down the road. There we confessed what had been troubling us. One after another we talked about what we struggle with. Each one of us seemed to have a big dilemma in our life. Nobody knew how to fix it but getting it out there and talking about it seemed to help. Through confession we realize were our real faults are. Openly confessing the things we deal with on a regular basis really makes us think through them and it helps make clear what we should do to fix it. Also that other person we confess to, can and hopefully will keep us accountable. Accountability is really important because sin is so overwhelming and consistent, that we need something consistently pulling us away from it.
So next time you find yourself caught in the same routine of asking for forgiveness over and over again, just ask a friend to listen or find a mentor. It really helps and I promise it will make you feel better. :)
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
What is true worship?
When I
think of worship, first I think of singing and praying to glorify God. That is
the set standard. We even have worship leaders and worship pastors. My next
thoughts are of the Israelites and the sacrifices they made, the burnt
offerings and the animals they slaughtered. Then I think of how imperfect that
form of worship is. How easily corruptible worship is if it’s made from our own
work and our own desires. The Israelites sought to please God but many fell
because they were doing it for their own selfish reasons. Worship and sacrifice
became a way that they would be lifted up over others. When they were not given
the things they required from God, they turned to false idols beyond themselves
and worshiped graven images. Man’s ultimate desire is for worship of himself
and to make himself seem as if he is above God. This was the sin at the fall of
Adam and Eve and is every man’s sin to this day. God is a selfish God and wants to be
worshiped and to be the only one worshipped. He has every right to desire
this.
So how
do we worship and what does worship look like? Is it sacrifices? Do we need to
sacrifice something? Sometimes I think about why we don’t do sacrifices like
the Old Testament. Yes Jesus fulfilled the ultimate sacrifice but wouldn’t it be
worshipping to offer a lamb on our grille to God? Or maybe even a small rabbit?
You know something simple and easy, and maybe we’ll get some good meat out of
it after it’s all done. Wouldn’t that please God? I don’t think it would.
Looking at the Old Testament there were a lot of rules and regulations
regarding sacrifices. The Levite priests would be the only ones allowed to
offer the sacrifices and there would be many different types of washings to
purify the one making the sacrifices. God has rules. He has a way that he wants
you to worship him. If we forget these rules, then we forget who God is.
Figuring out how to worship God correctly is something that we need to focus on
the most.
What is
the real answer then? When Jesus died he gave us the Holy Spirit and the Holy
Spirit dwells inside all Christians. It is in fact God dwelling in us if you
believe in the trinity. (Which I do) So now we have this all powerful all
knowing God actually coming down and being present in with us. To some that
might sound ridiculous but that’s what the Bible says so I can’t really argue. Lately
in my Bible study our college age has been doing we have talked a lot about the
Holy Spirit. My pastor even started a series on the Holy Spirit. The Holy
Spirit is really important and majorly neglected. The Holy Spirit changes
hearts which changes actions. I think worship is when a person relies on the
Holy Spirit to worship God the Father. This is difficult to explain and even I don’t
fully understand. However if we understand that the ultimate goal is for all
things to worship God then we might understand this better. At the fall Adam
rejected God and was kicked out of the Garden of Eden. He no longer sought God.
The Bible says, no one seeks God, not even one. People do not want anything to
do with God because they love themselves and their own desires. So worship
through the Holy Spirit is that changing of heart. It allows us to desire God’s
glory. (Which is ultimately the best thing anyways, right?)
The
next question is; what does this look like? Is it going to church on Sunday and
singing praises and hearing your pastor preach? Does it mean not getting drunk?
Going to Bible Study? Not being worldly? Or even being pro-life? Worshiping is
not necessarily believing in those things or doing them. Worship is anything
that a person can do to match God’s will. Glorifying God is ultimate so
therefore doing what he wants is supreme. Worship is praising God, it is being
morally and philosophically solid in God’s truth, it is acting the right way
when it calls for it. Worship is anything that pleases God. But through all
things we do we need to be in tune with the Spirit. The Spirit can change our
hearts and desires. He is the one that makes it so our worship is complete.
Having a deep desire and getting satisfaction from doing the will of God is the
real deal breaker when it comes to worshiping God. I’ve been there on Sunday
mornings when all I can think about is getting done with the service to do
something fun. Or walking through worship and not actually remembering why I am
there. It’s not true worship because I’m not focusing on God. I’m focusing on
myself, just like the Israelites. Worship is letting the Holy Spirit change you
to glorify God. We need to realize the presence of God and take action because
of it. Worship is so much more than just action. It is the inward and outward
working of God through us.
“God is most glorified in us when
we are most satisfied in Him”
-John Piper
Thanks for reading my ego trip. Have a pleasant week.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Introductions
I have never really desired to ever start a blog. Mainly because I don't really know what to blog about. My spiritual formation class requires us to have a blog and update it. This blog will focus on my reflections in my spiritual walk through the Christian life and my journey as a child of God. I hope some posts may lead to personal thoughts that really get at what I am dealing with in my own life but others may be distant and seem shallow. Writing this blog could be difficult from me because I will have to make a decision between what to keep to myself and what to share with the world. Hopefully this blog will lead to thoughts and questions that will help those who read this with their own spiritual journey.
This might be an important time to tell you a little big more about myself. I have known about God and Christianity my whole life. Since my family and I went to church at Whitneyville Bible Church and I took part in Awana's all the way till now where I am a senior at Kuyper College studying Accounting. I remember as a child praying and reading scripture with my grandma and even asking my best friend if he believed in God. Soon I started going to Peace Reformed church around my 6th grade year of school. Jr. high and high school really changed my outlook on Christ and developed my spiritual walk. I was actively involved in Peace Youth Group and learned a lot from my youth pastor, Nate Archer. Eventually I went to college at Ferris State and got involed in His House and had an amazing experience there. I met a lot of new people and really got to see the Christian faith acted out daily. I switched my major only after my first year and decided to do accounting through Kuyper College. I was looking for a school with a good bible degree because I knew that eventually I would be doing something in ministry and wanted a solid background to fall back on. Now I'm a senior and writing this blog on this long spiritual journey I have gone down and continue to walk.
The toughest thing about writing this blog will be actually remembering and organizing my thoughts. Sometimes I have a lot of ideas but don't write them down because I figure no one will care or I just forget to include them. I think personal reflection has been a strength of mine but interpreting my thoughts to someone else has always been a struggle. So if something I write about isn't very clear or well thought out, it is probably just not clear to you but it is to me. These future blog posts may be sort of difficult but I hope that my readers get something out of the things I say.
This might be an important time to tell you a little big more about myself. I have known about God and Christianity my whole life. Since my family and I went to church at Whitneyville Bible Church and I took part in Awana's all the way till now where I am a senior at Kuyper College studying Accounting. I remember as a child praying and reading scripture with my grandma and even asking my best friend if he believed in God. Soon I started going to Peace Reformed church around my 6th grade year of school. Jr. high and high school really changed my outlook on Christ and developed my spiritual walk. I was actively involved in Peace Youth Group and learned a lot from my youth pastor, Nate Archer. Eventually I went to college at Ferris State and got involed in His House and had an amazing experience there. I met a lot of new people and really got to see the Christian faith acted out daily. I switched my major only after my first year and decided to do accounting through Kuyper College. I was looking for a school with a good bible degree because I knew that eventually I would be doing something in ministry and wanted a solid background to fall back on. Now I'm a senior and writing this blog on this long spiritual journey I have gone down and continue to walk.
The toughest thing about writing this blog will be actually remembering and organizing my thoughts. Sometimes I have a lot of ideas but don't write them down because I figure no one will care or I just forget to include them. I think personal reflection has been a strength of mine but interpreting my thoughts to someone else has always been a struggle. So if something I write about isn't very clear or well thought out, it is probably just not clear to you but it is to me. These future blog posts may be sort of difficult but I hope that my readers get something out of the things I say.
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