Advent: Hope

In the first week of Advent, many Christians take time to remember and reflect upon the hope they have in Christ. When most of us use the word hope in our day to day conversations, we mean that we wish something were true. We might say, “I hope I get a car this Christmas.” In most cases, we whether or not we get what we hope for is in doubt. We might get it, but also might not. In the Bible, hope is something far surer. Because they trust that Christ rose from the grave, they trust he will keep his promise to come again. Continue reading Advent: Hope

Day 88: Until that Day

Yesterday, we entertained the possibility that the book of Revelation is not intended to answer the question “Are we there yet?” Instead, its main purpose is to help us answer a different question, “What are we here for until we get there?” John answers that question way back in his introduction to the seven churches of Asia Minor, “Grace and peace.” Yes, that’s right – the purpose of this book is to bring us grace and peace for today. Notice, he doesn’t say, “Grace and peace when Jesus comes back.” No, the implication is that through this revelation of Jesus Christ, grace and peace can be yours today. Continue reading Day 88: Until that Day

Day 86: What Does God Think

God’s love is so different from most of the pseudo-loves we encounter in this world that the very idea of it leaves many people doubting whether or not they could really be considered God’s children. “No one could love me like that,” we think. The apostle John seems prepared for our objections: “You say it isn’t so? That God couldn’t love us to the point of making sinful humans his own children? We’ll frankly, it doesn’t matter what you think. For God calls us his children and that is what we are!” Continue reading Day 86: What Does God Think

Day 85: Our People

I read somewhere recently about the increasing irrelevance of last names. Once upon a time, one’s surname connected a person to his or her family. The mention of someone’s surname carried with it not simply that person’s identity, but that of their parents, grandparents, and even great-great grandparents, as well. This was especially true if your family had lived in the same place for a long time. For good or for ill, your last name meant something. Continue reading Day 85: Our People

Day 83: Looking Forward

I’ve always loved Paul’s deep sense of purpose in the book of Philippians. All that forgetting what’s behind, pressing on towards what’s ahead. His words remind me that as Christians, we are to be a forward looking people (not just looking forward to finishing with our reading the Bible through!). We’re to have our eyes pointed forward towards God’s kingdom come, always on the lookout for the places and ways God’s kingdom is breaking into the world and our lives today. Continue reading Day 83: Looking Forward

Day 81: You are not your own

According to advertisers and rock stars, the great goal of the modern-Western project is to be one’s own man or woman. Never mind that reality confirms that none of us go to be where we are all on our own. In our culture, a person is deemed valuable, successful if they are self-made, self-aware, self-actualized. Be your own man. Be your own woman. Don’t let anyone tell you what to do. You gotta do what makes you happy. To be owned is to be shamed, played, degraded by another. Continue reading Day 81: You are not your own

Day 80: When we don’t have a word

Reading the Bible through in 90 days hasn’t been the easiest thing I’ve ever attempted. Blogging about the journey certainly hasn’t. Today almost got away from me. Life gets busy sometimes. I don’t always have something to say. That doesn’t mean the Bible doesn’t have something to say. Or more specifically, that God doesn’t have anything to say through the scriptures. He does. But there is always a distance between “Thus saith the Lord” and my words. Sometimes more than others. Continue reading Day 80: When we don’t have a word