Tag Archives: Bible

I’m Worth It, Cuz I’m Human

A basic digital clock radio with analog tuning

Image via Wikipedia

I am not one of those people who can listen to a song without really listening to the lyrics. Such bliss it would be if I could be one of those people! But I’ve been this way since I was a teen so I guess I’m hopelessly stuck in this rut for life.

Lyrics can be beautiful and lyrics can be ugly, they can be uplifting and they can be irritating depending on who wrote them and what their intentions were. Sometimes the meaning is obscure and those can really drive me nuts at times. I think the completely obscure ones actually don’t bother me too much however. I can listen to them without concern because no one can figure out the meaning; such as the lyric which says, “I’m a scary gargoyle on a tower that you made with plastic power, your rhinestone eyes are like factories far away.” What does that mean? Nothing. So it doesn’t bother me like some lyrics do.

My all time biggest pet peeve is with Christian Pop Music. I try to avoid it as much as possible; but when you don’t like the sound of a ringing alarm clock and prefer a clock radio to awaken you each morning, well, what else can you do? Maybe I should just condition myself to listening to the buzz of an alarm instead.

Currently, my two least favorite Christian Pop songs are Someone Worth Dying For by Mike’s Chair and Human by Natalie Grant. What I dislike about these songs and virtually all Christian Pop songs is the glorification of man instead of Christ. Which brings to mind another, older pop song which illustrates this point so well: “You (God) make everything glorious. And I am yours. What does that make me?” – David Crowder Band

Now, I know that God will glorify his saints one day in Heaven, but still, here is a song that focuses mainly on God and His glory and then shifts ever so slightly, the focus is taken off God for a moment, and the singer seems to say, “Wait a minute! What does that make me? Oh glorious Me, Me, Me! I’m pretty Special! What’s that? Oh yeah, I was worshiping God and got distracted with myself. You’re glorious too, God! Let me try to re-focus on You.”

Enter the two newest songs to rise to the top of the Christian Pop charts. Someone Worth Dying For centers on mankind, telling the listener that Christ died for you because you are worth dying for, which means you aren’t THAT bad of a sinner, you are mostly GOOD and therefore worthy, and if you are worthy then God actually OWES you salvation. Glorious You, You, You! Except…the gospel of the Bible does not back up this human sentiment expressed in the song.

Speaking of human sentiment. Natalie Grant’s song Human is a human wonder in and of itself. It is simplistic, a gifted five year old could have written it, and yet it is a glorious anthem of Humanism.  God gets a small part, very small, as it mentions God’s children…once again the focus of the song is on man after all! The gist of the song is this and I quote: “I’m human. You’re human. We are human.” Do you see the simplicity of this lyric? The rest of the song encourages humanity to “do better than this“. Why is that, Natalie? “It’ll be what makes the difference. It’ll be what makes us human.” Oh, OK! But wait, Natalie! I thought God was the one who is supposed to make the difference through sending His Son to die on the cross offering undeserved mercy and grace to His children. It seems to me that the focus of the Bible is on God and His glory which He says He will not share with another. He seems to be the central character in the Bible and the central theme is about what He does, not about what we humans do. We kind of messed up long ago in the Garden of Eden and we’ve never been able to overcome that no matter how much we try to “do better than this“.

Polished Stones

I’ve encountered two very different takes on the church in the past twenty-four hours. One article is titled “Is Church Life Stifling Your Creativity” by Donald Miller and is located here. The other article is titled “Church Can be Fun” by Eric Rauch and is located here.

The first article is brief; the author makes his point and encourages his readers to go forth and be creative. I have no problem with the creative process; God made us to be creative creatures. He did not however give us license to pursue our creativity in such a way that abandons all thought of Him and His holy requirements of us. He is, afterall, our Creator, King of the Universe, Sovereign God, Mighty, Omnipotent, I could go on and on. What I mean to say is we essentially belong to Him and should pay attention to what He says. And He does have quite a lot to say. He put it in a book and lest we forget He has something to say, He also sent His Son to earth and named His Son – The Word.

What follows Miller’s article is a string of comments by people who feel set free, positively liberated to create with abandon, never minding what those stuffy traditional church going types think. Essentially the whole spirit of the conversation is pick your favorite commercial slogan: “Obey Your Thirst” or “Just Do It” and let nothing stand in your way, que sera sera.

I don’t know the general age of those commenting but I’m guessing there is probably a good percentage of twenty-somethings. I’m old enough now that I can usually gauge the age of most internet commentors without actually seeing their birth year. Each age group has their own set of characteristics which they seem to follow in general. I’ve noticed a pattern of angst among many twenty-somethings. They largely reflect a general despair that follows them about like a dark cloud and they readily latch on to writings such as Miller’s, I think, because they like to view themselves as persecuted and misunderstood. I personally know several twenty-somethings that reflect this behavior, they are on my Facebook friends list and I get to read daily about their trials and afflictions. To be fair there are also some forty-somethings who also daily voice their horrific circumstances in life. Horrific circumstances like: “I hate my job”, “I hate my co-workers, they’re all idiots”, “I have a paper due in three different classes this week”, “I am so bored”, and things like that. Add something as stifling as church to this mix and you have a very sad lot of people.

Now compare that to the second article where Rauch mentions a bumper sticker he has recently spotted claiming that church can be fun. The aforementioned people group who finds themselves stifled and bored by church would be interested (maybe?) to learn that there are others who would like to make traditional church a little more comfortable for them. I know a pastor who offers door prizes to coax people into his church. Showering folks with even more material wealth than they already have however has its limits. These people are bored, stifled, and misunderstood for goodness sake! You can let them throw pies in your face till the cows come home and nothing will change their dire circumstances!

I would like to add here that Rauch is not advocating ‘fun church’ and he makes some rather good points in his article about ‘fun church’.

I think something is being missed here about the purpose of church in the first place. Yes, when you become part of a church you will eventually get your feelings hurt. Yes, you might feel judged at times. Yes, your needs might not be met. But here is what we must not miss. There is a God. He made things, lots and lots of things. He has an order, sets of rules for the things He made. He lets us discover some of those rules in nature like the law of gravity and laws of physics. There are other rules though which he doesn’t want us to discover on our own and so He had them written down and put them into a book which we call the Holy Bible. They are not man-made rules. They are God-made rules. He made the church an authority in a believer’s life that should be acknowledged and obeyed just like He made governments which rule society at large. I am not an authority unto myself. I have authority figures over me which God put over me. Not because he wants to stifle me but because He loves me. I read that in His book. There is much more in His book which governs my life as well. I belong to Him, my life is not my own. I need to be reminded of that daily. Interacting with others in my local church helps to knock the rough edges off of me as I knock the rough edges off of them. In the end we will be polished stones.

Sitting Still…and Not Complaining

Moses Sees the Promised Land from Afar, as in ...

Image via Wikipedia

 

The highest degree of faith is to be able to wait, sit still and not complain. ~ J.C. Ryle 

This quote by Ryle was the icing on my morning devotional cake. 

For the past two days I’ve been grumping about frustrated…once again. I did not show this on the outside; I’m pretty sure I didn’t anyway. But underneath, my mood was a roiling mass of pent-up pressure ready to explode. 

I have been reading John Sailhamer’s book The Meaning of the Pentateuch and while this book isn’t written necessarily to speak to the living of a Christian life, I was convicted by something it mentioned as I was reading this morning. 

Sailhamer’s focus is the composition and overall meaning of the Pentateuch. His book has made me think about the composition of the OT canon in ways I’ve never thought about it before. It has been a very interesting and eye-opening read. 

Yet, as I was reading about the composition of the Pentateuch this morning I came to a portion in the book where he was recounting how Moses and Aaron were not allowed to enter into the Promised Land because of unbelief. Sailhamer was using this passage to point out a compositional pattern within the Pentateuch. Nonetheless, as the Bible says in Isaiah 55:11 that God’s Word will not return to Him void but will accomplish what He desires, so it accomplished a convicting work in me this morning. 

I realized that the frustration I have been feeling is a lack of faith on my part. I think it is similar to the lack of faith on Moses’ and Aaron’s part which kept them from entering into the Promised Land. On the surface it seemed like Moses was within his rights to be frustrated with the children of Israel for their lack of faith. But Moses failed to have faith that God would bring this stubborn, complaining group of people into the land despite their multitude of shortcomings. 

And so my frustration is similar to Moses’ frustration. On the surface I seem to think it is within my rights to be frustrated, but now I see my frustration is a lack of faith that God can overcome any obstacle. This lack of faith is sin. I repented when I realized what I was doing wrong and my peace has returned. Now, if I can just remember this lesson and not have to repeat it! 

Living the Good Life

It has occurred to me that living the good life can cause one to miss out on living the good life, and what a tragic thing that is! The good life can be defined two ways: 1. It can mean living a life in which the pursuit of one’s personal happiness is the goal. Many would call this the good life but it wouldn’t fit a biblical definition. 2. It can mean living a life of personal holiness where one’s heart’s desire and happiness is found only in the pursuit of God such as Psalm 73:25 speaks of. This is the biblical definition of living the good life and I believe it is the correct view of living the good life.

I began reading one of my new books this morning. The book’s title is Radical: Taking Back Your Faith from the American Dream by David Platt. It seems like the perfect book to follow up the book I just read about Jonathan Edwards.

The first two chapters left me in tears this morning. I was convicted about the attitude I have at times. The times when the music at church seems to be lacking in quality and I complain about it. Or the times the auditorium is too chilly and I complain about that. I compare those times to the examples the author gave of the secret churches which meet in parts of Asia.

These churches are so hungry for hearing the word of God that they will not only risk their lives to come to church but they will sit on hard floors in small rooms with no heating, no air conditioning and they will sit and listen for hours. And then they want to come back the next day, earlier, so that they can fit in many more hours of Bible study.

While in America we fidget if the sermon goes past thirty minutes. After all, someone will point out, the average American has a short attention span. A forty-five minute sermon will often get the pastor a stern admonishment if it happens too frequently here in the U.S.

This book caused me to ask myself: Am I that hungry for God’s word? How much time do I spend in the presence of God each day? How often do I let distractions pull me away? Do I acknowledge Him in ALL my ways?

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.