Faith
Coming Home, Bible Study & Videos
Well, my vacation for February/March in Canada has been confirmed, so I will be coming home for a month! I'm quite excited by this... by the time I fly out, it will have been more than two years since I left home (which was at about 3 AM on New Years Day 2008), and over a year since I saw (most) of my family down here in Australia. It's too bad I wasn't able to get home for Christmas... that would be fun... oh well.
I have posted a few songs that were recorded when I played for "Live Off The Deck" at our Family Night Barbecue a couple weeks ago...
- Aaron's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- Read more
The Relevance Of Jesus Second Coming To Our Generation: now what? (Matthew 24-25)
In my previous article, I sought to establish that Jesus’ Second Coming is, indeed, very relevant to our generation now. I did not, however, provide much application... what does it actually mean for us, here and now, for it to be relevant? In other words... what are we to do, knowing that we are in the beginning of the transition period that will end when Jesus establishes His throne on earth?
This is a huge question! One could write a book on this subject and not encapsulate everything. With that in mind, we will be looking at the passage we are already familiar with, which is Matthew 24-25, as Jesus lays out some important principles therein as to what we should expect and how we ought to live our lives in response.
The relevance of Jesus' Second Coming to our generation
"Studying Jesus' Second Coming has no real impact on us, now, and is therefore irrelevant."I hear this all too often, or something similar. I'm sure you have too, or maybe that is your belief and you have said it yourself? I believe that this is not only an un-Biblical, but a very dangerous position to hold as a Christian in this day and age. Some will have objections to this, of course... probably the strongest being from the camp of Preterism, who in a nutshell believe that most or all of prophecy regarding Jesus was fulfilled in or before 70 A.D. I will not address this, here... I will simply say that this doctrine misses the mark in a terrible way, and is not worthy of rebuttal here... I have some other thoughts on it in this blog post. If you do want me to address the topic of preterism more in full, I may in the future. The others that often object to the relevancy of Jesus' Second Advent, in my experience, often seem to base it around the idea that it doesn't actually help us living our lives now.
Dissatisfied
I'm not sure what I want to write on to begin, but I do know what I feel in my heart.
Over the last little while, when people ask me how I am, I'm not sure how to answer. Really, I'm good, I have little to complain about. Just below the surface, however, is this boiling ocean of discontentment. It is not that I don't have many possessions, it is not that I have little money: I have all of these I need to survive, and, indeed, more than I need to survive of both. I can fill my stomach, and pay my bills... what else do I even need?
No, friends, my discontentment runs much deeper than that, still.
- Aaron's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- Read more
95 Theses To The Evangelical Church by Greg Gordon
"I have been writing this volume while residing in Germany for a teaching trip. I am humbled by penning these 95 theses in the same country as Martin Luther did many years ago. I submit these to the evangelical church of our day and pray that God would allow anything of truth in these pages to bend and change men's hearts back to God." - Greg Gordon - http://www.sermonindex.net
**
“It is useless for large companies of believers to spend long hours begging God to send revival. Unless we intend to reform we may as well not pray. Unless praying men have the insight and faith to amend their whole way of life to conform to the New Testament pattern there can be no true revival.” - A.W. Tozer**
- Aaron's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- Read more
Some thoughts on evangelism and preaching the gospel
I don't even know how to start this... but please, know that I am writing this not to prove that I am right or to demote anyone's role in ministry or any such thing, although I think I will make some bold statements.
I think... I don't understand this approach that some people have to the propagation of the gospel. That approach being... we get to know someone, and then introduce it to them gradually as they become more comfortable with us.
I have nothing against it, at least at the surface. I do the same thing myself! I don't always tell people about the wonderful gospel the first time I meet them. But when I think about it... something stinks about that scenario. The gospel is the very testimony of Jesus Christ, around whom my life pivots, but even more He is the Axis Of History, the One for Whom the universe was created. The very being of anyone on earth is directly related at all times to the Person of Jesus Christ. The gospel should be one of, if not the first thing that we share with someone we meet, should it not?
But... we don't... I don't. Why not?
My commitment and my calling...
Ahh, I have to watch my heart, friends!
In some ways, I feel trapped.
I have all these conflicting desires within my heart, and the main bulk of them don't feel relevant to where I am, now.
The funny thing is, I want to be a missionary, but more and more I am realising that what I am doing does not seem like missions work... this article I recently posted explains what I have been learning regarding missions.
That is not to say what I am doing is not important...
A few thoughts on the Church climate
Well... I was writing an email, and this really got stirred up in my heart. Probably partly to do with finishing Tozer's book, too.
Anyways... I was sitting in bed and considering the books I've read in the last five years, or so, and two in particular jumped out at me that actually both encourage and sadden me.
"I Want It Now" ... I will work for it.
So, I've been reading A.W. Tozer's The Pursuit Of God and something really jumped out at me as I was reading, tonight.
[caption id="" align="alignright" width="83" caption="The Pursuit Of God"]
[/caption]
[/caption]
"A Generation of Christians reared among pushbuttons and automatic machines is impatient of slower and less direct methods of reaching their goals. We have been trying to apply machine-age methods to our relationship with God. We read our chapter, have our short devotions, and rush away, hoping to make up for our deep inward bankruptcy by attending another gospel meeting or listening to another thrilling story told by a religious adventurer lately returned from afar." (p. 45)How true is this? In my own life, I have tried to follow devotional guides, I have tried to read one chapter of my Bible every day. I, on an average day, listen to at least one sermon, sometimes three or four.
- Aaron's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- Read more
God Exists.
Oh gosh.
I'm watching the end of "The Da Vinci Code".
So dumb! It's entertaining if you can watch/read it as a mere story... but the assertions and deceptions contained therein regarding the nature of Jesus are ridiculous!
On a different subject altogether, isn't it funny how people can try disprove God, but cannot? At the same time, neither can we prove the existence of God?
Ahh, but I am not, cannot be agnostic, either. I experience God, every single day. How could I deny that?
- Aaron's blog
- Login or register to post comments

