Coram Deo ~

Looking at contemporary culture from a Christian worldview


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Living Life Before the Face of God in 2015

Cemetery Story

Last week I made my annual trek out to Funk’s Grove cemetery to visit my Mom’s grave on Christmas Eve. I always play Andy Williams’ Christmas music on the way to and from the cemetery because it reminds me of Mom, who used to play his first Christmas album as we were growing up.  As I visited her grave I was reminded of a rather strange story.

When Mom died unexpectedly in 1996 at age 60 we didn’t have any plans on where she and Dad would be buried.  As we were sitting in the Family Room at the hospital, still in shock that we had lost Mom, the thoughts turned to where she would be buried. Mom loved the fall colors. Dad mentioned that the previous fall they were out at the Funks Grove cemetery and Mom mentioned that she could see herself buried near one of the beautiful trees out there.  So that’s where she is buried. It’s a beautiful cemetery in Central Illinois that dates back to 1830.

At that time Tammy and I decided to go ahead and buy a plot near Mom and Dad’s plot. I remember it not being far from a bench that I would sit on when I came out to visit Mom’s grave. The guy who was running the cemetery back then had a hand drawn map (from 1830?) with the locations marked on it.  He seemed pretty disorganized but we didn’t think too much of it at the time. We made our installment payments and eventually got the deed to our plot. Over the years I would see additional graves dug near where our plot was but figured all was well.

A few years ago we got a voice message from the new caretaker of the cemetery. He wanted to talk to us. What could he want? Well, it turns out the cemetery had installed a computer system, and as they went through their records “our” plot had been sold to two different clients. And the other client had died first. Yes, someone was buried in our plot. Seriously? At least we found out about it ahead of time. Could have been much more of an issue if they had found it out when they were getting ready to dig the hole for one of us!  Should we have ‘stood our ground’ and made them evict the other client? No, we ended up picking out a plot in the same general area, but it made for an interesting story to tell.

~ THIS AND THAT ~

2014 CHART-TOPPERS:          

RESOLUTIONS FOR THE NEW YEAR:

IN THE NEWS: Newsies

  • Disney’s Newsies. We saw the musical (based on the 1992 movie starring an 18 year old Christian Bale) in Chicago over the weekend. We really enjoyed it! Check it out if it comes anywhere near you – GREAT singing and dancing.            
  • Jesus Changes Everything: An Announcement Regarding My Future Ministry. R.C. Sproul Jr. announces his parting with Highlands Ministries.
  • Unbroken Film Gets My Dad’s Faith Right. Luke Zamperini writes “That was his (Louis Zamperini) greatest hope for the film version of Unbroken: not that it would be applauded by fellow Christians, although he certainly would have been honored and humbled by their appreciation; but that it would be seen by non-Christians drawn to a rousing epic about the indomitable human spirit who, when the credits have finished rolling, might just discover there’s a whole lot more to his story than that.
  • Louis Zamperini: Captured by Grace. Here is a 28 minute documentary on Zamperini from the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.
  • Heisman Trophy winner: ‘Football doesn’t define me’ Marcus Mariota of Oregon will face Ohio State in the National Championship game January 12.
  • ‘Wheel of Fortune’ contestant solves puzzle with ONE letter. Matt DeSanto, a Pennsylvania father of two, racked up $91,892 in prize winnings, a new record for the show. DeSanto told TODAY.com that he didn’t do anything special to prepare.
  • Newsweek on the Bible — So Misrepresented It’s a Sin. Albert Mohler calls Newsweek’s recent cover story “An irresponsible screed of post-Christian invective leveled against the Bible and, even more to the point, against evangelical Christianity. It is one of the most irresponsible articles ever to appear in a journalistic guise.”
  • NYPD Officer Rafael Ramos Saw Streets as His Ministry. Rafael Ramos was just hours away from becoming a lay chaplain and graduating from a community-crisis chaplaincy program before he and fellow New York police Officer Wenjian Liu were gunned down in their patrol car Saturday in Brooklyn.
Courtesy of World Magazine

Courtesy of World Magazine

MUSIC:

BOOKS: Spurgeon's Sorrows by Zack Eswine

CHRISTIAN LIVING:

FREE AND RECOMMENDED RESOURCES:Morning and Evening - Spurgie

Tullian Tchividjian is the Senior Pastor of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, grandson of Billy Graham and one of my favorite authors. This is a book of daily readings released just in time to begin 2015. Here is a flavor of what to expect from the reading for January 1:

“We start every new year thinking, This is the year! We resolve to turn over a new leaf – and this time we’re serious. We promise ourselves that we’re going to quit bad habits and start good ones. We’re going to get in shape, eat better, waste less time, and be more content, disciplined, and intentional. We’re going to be better husbands, wives, fathers, mothers. We’re going to pray more, serve more, plan more, give more, read more, and memorize more Bible verses. We’re going to finally be all that we can. No more messing around.

And then, twelve months later, we realize we’ve fallen short – again.

What I’m most deeply grateful for is that God’s love for us, approval of us, and commitment to us does not ride on our resolve but on Jesus’s resolve for us.”

He goes on to write: “As this new year gets under way, take comfort knowing that we are weak and He is strong – that even as our love for Jesus falls short, Jesus’s love for us is eternal.”

I look forward to making this book part of my devotional reading each day. If you would like to try out a free 52 week email devotional from Tullian, you can sign up here – It is Finished Devotional.

~ UPDATED PAGES ON THE BLOG ~

I’m Currently ReadingThe Art of McCartneyJohn The Gospel of Wisdom

Book Review ~ John: The Gospel of Wisdom by Michael Card

Music Review ~ The Art of McCartney – Various Artists

 

Favorite Quotes of the Week ~ 1.5.2015

• Try this New Year’s resolution: I won’t check my phone, my tablet, or my computer until I’ve first read a chapter in my Bible. Kevin DeYoung
• Have you no wish for others to be saved? Then you’re not saved yourself, be sure of that! Charles Spurgeon
• The “old man” dies hard. He doesn’t die easily. And the struggle goes on throughout life. R.C. Sproul
• Don’t panic, if you haven’t figured out 2015. Every moment is the beginning of the rest of your life. Begun is begun, no matter when. John Piper
• To say doctrine doesn’t matter, only how you live matters, is itself a doctrine. It’s the doctrine of salvation by works. Tim Kelller
• You cannot experience God without knowing who he is, what he has done, and who you are in relation to him. Michael Horton
• We can only grasp the gospel’s sweetness if we first grapple with its offense- you can’t save yourself. Tim Keller
• Make the most of your life instead of comparing it to everyone else’s. Lecrae
• Christianity loses its scriptural fidelity and internal power when it no longer affirms both sola fide and the necessity of obedience. Kevin DeYoung
• If Christ is not everything, He is nothing. He who has Christ has everything. Steven Lawson
• We do not need more conferences, and celebrities. We need more churches where the Spirit is immersing sinners into Christ day by day. Michael Horton
• Grace is not simply leniency when we have sinned. Grace is the enabling gift of God not to sin. Grace is power, not just pardon. John Piper
• It’s better to feel sorry for doing something bad than to feel superior for doing something good. Tullian Tchividjian
• We do not find success by trying to be successful or happiness by trying to be happy. Michael Horton
• We too often complicate that which God has made simple and too often try to simplify that which God has made mysterious. Burk Parsons
• A spiritual leader is one who knows the way, shows the way, and goes the way. Steven Lawson
• Prayer is the breath, the watchword, the comfort, the strength, the honor of a Christian. Charles Spurgeon
• The best way to guard our hearts isn’t to seal them off from the world but fill them up with grace. Scotty Smith
• I am throwing all my good works overboard, and lashing myself to the plank of free grace; for I hope to swim to glory on it. Charles Spurgeon
• We often think of prayer as a means to an end. Prayer is the goal. Francis Chan
• I fear that many don’t speak out and work against abortion because they think it’s not cool or not the “in thing” to be passionate about. Burk Parsons
• If you do not receive Christ as the Lamb who saves and delivers, you will face Him as the Lion who stalks and devours. Steven Lawson
• To discover the real you, look at what you spend time thinking about when no one is looking. Tim Keller
• It’s because Jesus spoke so frequently about hell that the church should take the concept seriously. R.C. Sproul

integrating faith and work

Beyond the Ark by Doug Michael

Beyond the Ark by Doug Michael

 


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Movie Review ~ Big Eyes

Big EyesBig Eyes, rated PG-13
** ½

*SPOILER ALERT*

This film, directed by Tim Burton, is based on actual events around the very popular “big eye” paintings of sad children/waifs of the late 1950’s and 1960’s.

The film opens in 1958 with Margaret (Amy Adams) leaving her first husband with young daughter Jane (the younger Jane is played by Delaney Raye and the older Jane by Madeline Arthur). She heads to San Francisco where she meets with friend DeeAnn (Krysten Ritter) and gets a job painting artwork on baby cribs.

At an outdoor art show where she is selling her distinctive “big eye” paintings she meets Walter Keane (Christoph Waltz). Keane is charismatic, appears to be a successful painter of scenes from Paris, and is very friendly with the ladies. Walter and Margaret’s relationship moves quickly. When Margaret’s ex-husband files a motion for sole custody of Jane claiming Margaret isn’t a fit mother, Walter says that they should get married, which is what they do. But Walter is not what he appears to be. There is much about Walter that Margaret doesn’t know.

After Walter is denied a spot for his paintings (street scenes in Paris) and Margaret’s waif paintings by the owner (Jason Schwartzman) of a local art gallery, Walter talks a jazz music club owner into letting him rent space on the club walls to display their artwork. When people show interest in Margaret’s work, Walter takes credit for the paintings. When she finds out about it she isn’t happy, but she eventually goes along with the deception for ten years. Walter becomes increasingly popular while Margaret is left to produce her paintings in her dark home studio, lying to friends and even her daughter Jane about who the actual artist of the popular paintings is.

In some ways Margaret is ahead of her times as a woman in the late 1950’s and 1960’s, leaving her husband and going on her own. In other ways, she unbelievably gives into her second husband Walter when he says that paintings by a woman wouldn’t sell.

Danny Huston stars as local newspaper writer Dick Nolan, who helps publicize Walter and the “big eyes” paintings. Terrance Stamp stars as vicious New York Times art critic who criticizes the “big eyes” mural submitted for the 1964-65 New York World’s Fair.

The film includes some adult language, and several abuses of both God’s and Jesus’s names.

I found this to be a very interesting story, but the usual creative Burton doesn’t do much with it as a film. It felt like, shall I say, a “paint by numbers” telling of the story (it could easily have been a Lifetime movie).


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Happy New Year!

Happy New YearReflections on 2014

Looking back at 2014, I realize that I have been very blessed. Two significant items that took place were:

  • My graduation from Covenant Seminary nineteen years after beginning my studies in 1995. We had a wonderful graduation weekend celebration in St. Louis with family and friends.
  • My wife Tammy’s new calling as a Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA). Tammy completed intensive training in September and October and has now started to serve as a CASA.

Other things from 2014 that I’m thankful for:

  • Overall, our health, and the health of our families, has been relatively good.
  • Our nephew Mark got married to Tiffany.
  • Our nephew Drew and his wife Allison had their first child, daughter Salem.
  • Tammy and I completed two book clubs – The Five Love Languages by Gary Chapman and Visions of Vocation by Steven Garber. Our next book is Generous Justice by Tim Keller.
  • Completed one (The Gospel at Work), and have started a second (What’s Best Next), Faith and Work Book Club with peers at work.
  • Hosting Michael Card’s Mathew: The Gospel of Identity (Biblical Imagination Conference) at our church.
  • Having a good job and team that I love working with each day.
  • Enjoying another post-season run by the St. Louis Cardinals, getting to attend several games in St. Louis.
  • Enjoying the 2014 Ligonier Ministries National Conference in Orlando with good friends Don and Angela.
  • Enjoying eight wonderful concerts, including Paul McCartney, James Taylor, Chris Tomlin and Toby Mac.
  • Enjoying a sabbatical as an elder at my church.

I have been blessed this year. I pray that you have as well.

Looking Toward 2015

The beginning of a new year is a good time to set goals. These are good ones:

  • Spend more time with family
  • Eat better
  • Exercise more
  • Get more sleep
  • Go for that job you’ve been dreaming about
  • Read more good books
  • Subscribe to and read good blogs
  • Read through the Bible

There are so many good daily devotionals and Bible reading plans out there, how do you choose which one to use? Nathan W. Bingham of Ligonier Ministries recently compiled a list of Bible reading plans. Tim Challies also suggested a few Bible Reading Plans.   For years, I have used Ligonier Ministries’ excellent magazine Tabletalk. The magazine includes several excellent articles, daily studies and a Bible reading plan. In 2015, the daily studies will take the reader through the Old Testament Wisdom literature, also known as the Poetical Books – Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Solomon. Whichever plan you choose, why not make it a goal to read through the Bible in 2015.

I would also commend to you to start your day with The Briefing, the excellent podcast with daily worldview analysis about the leading news headlines and cultural conversations from Albert Mohler, and to sign up to receive Scotty Smith’s wonderful Heavenward Prayers via email. I also plan to use Tullian Tchividjian’s new daily devotional book It Is Finished: 365 Days of Good News during 2015.

Many blessings for a wonderful 2015 as you grow in your knowledge of and love for our Lord and Savior.

~ UPDATED PAGES ON THE BLOG ~

BOOK REVIEW:Louis Zamperini Book Don’t Give Up, Don’t Give In: Lessons from an Extraordinary Life by Louis Zamperini and David Rensin

I’m Currently Reading

All The People Said AmenMUSIC REVIEW: All the People Said Amen – Matt Maher

 

~ THIS AND THAT ~

MOVIES:

UNBROKEN:

IN THE NEWS:

CHRISTIAN LIVING:

MUSIC:

BOOKS:

  • 50 Books Real Simple Readers Love. Real Simple asked “What book made you love to read?” and this list was compiled from about 4,000 responses.
  • The Evangelistic Zeal of George Whitefield. I mentioned recently that I was preparing for the 2015 Ligonier Ministries National Conference by listening to last year’s conference messages. One of those messages was a short optional conferences session by Steven Lawson on his new book The Evangelistic Zeal of George Whitefield. If you’ve ever heard Lawson speak, you known he is a passionate and energetic speaker. When he talks about his book, you want to go right out and read it. That’s just what I did after I listened to this message recently. Look for a review in the next few weeks.
  • Week 1 of Francis and Lisa Chan’s New Series on Marriage. The series corresponds to their excellent book You and Me Forever: Marriage in Light of Eternity.
  • The Great Divorce on Stage. Jesse Johnson writes about Max McLean’s new stage production of C.S. Lewis’ book The Great Divorce. The production comes to the McAninch Arts Center at College of DuPage March 28-29.
  • Trip Lee preached his last sermon at Capitol Hill Baptist Church on December 21. He spent four years at the church, interning under Mark Dever. His new book Rise: Get Up and Live in God’s Great Story will be published January 27. Watch the video for the book here.David Platt Book
  • New David Platt Book. The author of Radical will release Counter Culture: A Compassionate Call to Counter Culture in a World of Poverty, Same-Sex Marriage, Racism, Sex Slavery, Immigration, Abortion, Persecution, Orphans and Pornography on February 3.

Favorite Quotes of the Week ~ 12.29.2014

  • Religious excellence will not earn you a place at God’s table. Your own efforts will never merit you a seat of honor. Michael Horton
  • Success and suffering will either darken your heart or make you wise, but they won’t leave you where you were. Tim Keller.
  • The overwhelming emphasis of contemporary Christianity: “Just do it.” The overwhelming emphasis of Biblical Christianity: “It is finished.” Tullian Tchividjian
  • The invitation is not Christ plus anything, but Christ alone. Michael Horton
  • What are the years from 25 to 75? They are the accumulation of all the questions I wish I had known to ask my teachers. John Piper
  • To build your house on the rock is to hear what Jesus says and obey. To be foolish and build your house on the sand is to hear and ignore. Kevin DeYoung.
  • Advent = Not what’s under the tree, but Who was on it. Scotty Smith
  • The more you think about it, the more staggering it gets. Nothing in fiction is so fantastic as is this truth of the incarnation. J.I. Packer
  • To be a Christian without prayer is no more possible than to be alive without breathing. Martin Luther
  • Jesus’ claims are particularly unnerving, because if they are true there is no alternative but to bow the knee to him. Tim Keller
  • The Son of God became a man to enable men to become sons of God. C.S. Lewis
  • Leaders must be close enough to relate to others but far enough ahead to motivate them. John Maxwell
  • Of all the things in the world that can set the heart burning, there is nothing like the presence of Jesus! Charles Spurgeon
  • You know you’ve created god in your own image when your god loves those you love and hates those you hate. Burk Parsons
  • The quest for glory can never be satisfied, it must be extinguished. Martin Luther
Beyond the Ark by Doug Michael

Beyond the Ark by Doug Michael

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integrating faith and work

  • 19 Apps That Made the Difference for Me (and My Team) in 2014. Michael Hyatt writes “These are the nineteen apps I used the most in 2014, the apps that help me run my business and maximize different aspects of my personal life. I was tempted to rank these, but I found I couldn’t. Instead I’ve listed them in alphabetical order.”
  • My Top 20 Most Popular Posts of 2014 (And What I Learned from Them). From Michael Hyatt.
  • Glenn Brooke’s 14 Best Books Read in 2014. Matt Perman’s excellent book What’s Best Next made Glenn’s list – and mine too.
  • 26 Ways to “Provoke the 1 Peter 3:15 Question” at Work. J.D. Greear lists 26 ways that you can live provocatively at work.
  • The Source of Your Unlimited Potential. The latest podcast from Andy Andrews.
  • Three Critical Responsibilities of a True Leader. Dave Kraft writes “just finished a very insightful book, “View From the Top,” by David Michael Lindsay, President of Gordon Cromwell College (a Christian university in Boston). Here are three critical responsibilities of a true leader adapted from the book. I both resonate and agree with all three. The three main points are David’s the content under each point is mine.”
  • Humanizing Work. What resources does Christianity give us to humanize work? Tim Keller explains how work is not part of humanity’s curse but rather how God calls us to cultivate this earth to bring about human flourishing for the common good. Looking at the condition of the heart will lead to loving those we work with well instead of exploiting them. Check out this message from Tim Keller.
  • Thoughts on How to Schedule the Day. Matt Perman writes “I believe in having a general framework from which you approach your day. In other words, a basic schedule of sorts that gives some behind-the-scenes guidance for how to slot things in your day. This template is not something you literally put on your calendar, but is more of a mindset.”
  • WEEKLY ROUNDUP: Doing What You Love, What Scares You, and What Brings You Peace. Here is a roundup of great articles that are worth your time to read, ponder, share, or even argue with from Mission: Work.
  • Resources on Faith and Vocation. Chris Armstrong offers some good suggestions.
  • Sloth & Diligence. Ken Jones writes “If we allow our thoughts about work to be shaped by the world, we will be susceptible to making our vocation into an idol. It is not enough to work but to work diligently, so that we do not give room for slothfulness, nor do we simply become men-pleasers. We should take to heart the strong language of Scripture about sloth and laziness. In our labor and in all areas of our lives we are to live to the glory of God.”
  • Business as Ministry. Andre Yee of Desiring God writes “To put it simply, vocation is the specific work that God has called each of us to. And vocation is not limited to those who serve in Christian ministry.”
  • Recommended Resource: Kingdom Calling. Here are four points from Amy Sherman’s excellent book Kingdom Calling. You can find a full review on our site under Work and Leadership Library.
  • Chocolate and Meaningful Work Alayna Greenfield writes “The following videos capture how attitudes change when people realize how their work produces something worthwhile or benefits others.” Alayna Greenfield writes “The following videos capture how attitudes change when people realize how their work produces something worthwhile or benefits others.”
  • How to Develop the People You Really Want. True leadership is about developing the people on your team. What is the best way to develop the people you really want to have?  Here is Dan Rockwell with some wonderful insight on how exactly to do that.

 Faith and Work Book Clubs – Won’t you read along with us?

Visions of VocationVisions of Vocation Book Club

Steven Garber was the commencement speaker at my graduation from Covenant Seminary in May. Tammy and I have been reading and discussing this book for the past few months. This week we complete the book by looking at the Epilogue: But Are You Happy?

God at WorkGod at Work Book Club

God at Work: Your Christian Vocation in All of Life by Gene Edward Veith Jr.

When we recently visited St. Andrews Chapel where R.C. Sproul is one of the pastors, this book was the church’s “Book of the Month”. I’m excited to read it. We’ll look at a chapter each week – won’t you read along with us? This week we cover Chapter 9: The Ethics of Vocation.