Hey all…we just received this update from Patrick and Barb Lataillade in Haiti. Please be praying for them during this crisis…and allow your heart to be open to responding to their plea for support.
OPERATION NEHEMIAH
Gustav Disaster
Hey all…we just received this update from Patrick and Barb Lataillade in Haiti. Please be praying for them during this crisis…and allow your heart to be open to responding to their plea for support.
OPERATION NEHEMIAH
Gustav Disaster
HEY…I just realized what I forgot! This week we’ll be finishing up our short (or long, depending on your attention span) study of Psalm 103. This week, we’ll be reading v 15-22. As you read it, what do you learn about yourself…what does it reveal about God to you?
Has anyone ever said, or have you said to yourself “God is in control.”? What does that mean to you? Has that phrase ever made you feel worse instead of better? (it has for me) What does it really mean that God is in control? That He’s got the remote? That He’s got an oil field? What about when things go wrong…where does that fit in to His control?
Stuff to think about.
On another note…have you read The Shack (we carry it in the Corner bookstore)? I have…and wow. Just, wow. I highly recommend this book, especially for those struggling with the question of pain and God’s will. It’s really a good read, and I believe it will give you a refreshing sense of personalization in your relationship with God. But that’s just my opinion. You may hate it….I don’t know.
One more thing. Donald Miller (author of Blue Like Jazz, and someone I dearly appreciate) prayed at the DNC. His prayer has really sparked a lot of conversation…and there are a lot of different opinions about the content of the prayer. I’d like to hear your thoughts on it. Not about the fact that he was praying at the DNC…that’s a no brainer. If someone asks you to pray, in my opinion, you pray. So I don’t want to discuss the partisan, political stuff. What he said in the prayer….that’s what I’m pondering. I’d like to hear your thoughts,, because I’ve heard all my own. Below is the video
By the way….has that dude lost weight or WHAT? I’ll be first in line at the bookstore to buy his “Blue Like Jazzercize” book.
We will be returning to Psalm 103 this Sunday, and we’ll be reading vs 8-14. 
It would be hard to find a more comforting set of verses in all the Bible…though there are many of them to choose from. The revelation of God…and how He views humanity which is set forth in vs 8-14 stand in alarming contrast with the expectations of so many religious institutions. For myself, a recovering legalist, the discovery of these verses went a long way toward healing my twisted view of who God is, and how He wants to relate to me.
It’s within this passage that God unveils His paternal heart for us…which would become the pinnacle of Jesus’ teaching on how we relate to God. Jesus broke with the norm and invited us to pray to God as “Our Father”, something that was out of step with the understanding of that time, but which was clearly revealed here in this Psalm. God cares for us like parents care for their children…only infinitely more so.
For most of us, we don’t really have a good framework to understand what that means. For many, our parental interaction was flawed, if not broken. When we conjure up images of a parent’s interaction with us, we may struggle with memories of abuse or conditional affection or limited affection…and on and on.
That’s why this Psalm is so important. While God uses the image of a parent’s love, He qualifies it by describing what that love looks like, and what it means to us.
What images that are used to describe how God views us, or cares for us, or understands us speak the loudest to you from this passage? What does it tell you about this God you seek to know?
Do you struggle with a sense of inadequacy…a concern that God is barely tolerating your inability to follow Him well…or at very least, do you imagine that He’s irritated with you, displeased that you don’t have it together yet? If so…let these verses from Psalm 103 wash over you, rinsing away those inaccurate and burdensome notions. Let this Psalm hold out strong and loving arms that you can leap into; rolling in gleeful wonder as you receive the love that only a Papa like Him can give.
When your enemy tries to discourage you by reminding you of your failures and sins…tell him “Yep, I know I’m no good at this…BUT AS FAR AS SUNRISE IS FROM SUNSET, THAT’S HOW FAR HE REMOVED MY SINS FROM ME!” Then hold tight to the hand which reaches for you from Psalm 103, and know the contentment that comes from being loved.
Have you tried praying this Psalm yet? If so, what have your experiences been?
See yer’ Sundee.
For reasons I’ll explain later, I’m not going to begin a study on another full book just yet. Instead, this Sunday, we’re going to begin a short study on what, for me, has become a focal point chapter in the book of Psalms.
Psalm 103 will be our subject for the next few weeks. Read it here in the NKJV. Read it here in The Message. (I really love The Message version…and we’ll be referencing it in our study).
This is a Psalm I love to pray…for a while I prayed it every day, but now its every few weeks, as other Scriptures and prayers have been in the forefront for me.
Psalm 103 is a Psalm of David…a song that is believed to have been written in his old age. I imagine that old king, scars on the arms which hold his harp, reflecting on his adventurous life with God as he hums and sings in time with his strum. It’s such a wonderful prayer.
As you read it, do me a favor. If you need to, print out a copy of the Message version of Psalm 103. Now, sometime when you have a moment of quiet…somewhere when you’re all alone, and the TV isn’t screaming what you should buy, and the kids are occupied or asleep….in that time, read this out loud (a whisper will do though), and add personal pronouns in the reading…so that it is a conversation in which you personally are speaking to God.
It will read like this:
1-2 O my soul, bless God. From head to toe, I’ll bless your holy name!
O my soul, bless God,
don’t forget a single blessing!
3-5 You forgive my sins—every one.
You heal my diseases—every one.
You redeem me from hell—You save my life!
You crown me with love and mercy—a paradise crown.
You wrap me in goodness—beauty eternal.
You renew my youth—I’m always young in Your presence.
….and on and on. You get the idea. Personalize the language of the Psalm…make it YOUR prayer…and pray that Psalm to God. Think over what it means as your saying it (realizing that He hears you, no matter what you hear). Let it soak in.
What does this Psalm say to you in the first five verses? What do you see as the emphasis? What is revealed, and who is it revealed about?
Do these verses evoke any thoughts you want to share, good or bad? Questions maybe? Testimonials?
Just wondering. Hopefully this will be a cool study. I really love Psalm 103.
Sorry for the delay in posting this week…I have no valid reasons, only excuses.
So, we’re going to finish our study in the gospel of Mark this Sunday. It’s always sort of bittersweet to me to finish up a book. Its a great feeling of accomplishment, but also a sadness to leave such familiar territory.
We’re going to be reading the last part of chapter 16, verses 9-20. For roughly the last 1,800 years there has been a controversy surrounding these verses. Many scholars, both ancient and modern, believe they are an addition to the original text and should not be included nor taken seriously. If you feel like reading, you can find a fair summary of the opposing views HERE.
For my part, I find compelling arguments on both sides of the issue. To determine if I should include these verses in our study, I asked myself some questions. 1) Are the verses in question in conflict with the rest of the Scriptures of the New Testament? My answer was no, they’re not and in fact can be correlated to other gospel and didactic passages. 2) Do the verses introduce foreign doctrines? Again, the answer is no. Some cessationist advocates may try to insinuate that verses 15-18 could promote wild charismania…but even there, the things Jesus lists off in the passage DID get experienced by the Christians of the book of Acts….so a person could still argue that those gifts had ceased after that (if they wanted to, and wanted to be wrong).
The fact is, every translation of the Bible today still includes these verses, and just add a footnote. God is pretty big, that much I’m sure of. I think He’s well able to see to it that we have the Word He wants us to have…so…I’m going to teach on those verses. What do you think about them?
If you read them over, you’ll notice that one reaction is pretty consistent from those who only hear about Jesus rising from the dead. What is it? Put yourself in their place…how do you think you would have responded? (seriously…when you read about someone who “spotted” Elvis working at a 7-11, what is your first reaction to that kind of “news”?) Yet in verse 14, Jesus is none too amused at their response.
How would you summarize verses 15-18? What do those verse tell us about the world we live in now that Jesus has risen from the dead? V 19 is the fuel for v 20…Jesus “ascended”, or was taken into the unseen realm of heaven (which N.T. Wright describes as the control room for the events of earth, which I think is brilliant). From that place of power and dominion He does something…what does He do, and through what agency does He do it?
Well…don’t feel pressured to respond…I know this was late in coming. And don’t feel like you need to answer all the questions I pose…if just one thing strikes your interest, lets talk about it!
Peace…see you Sunday!