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Teach theology in your church!

Chuck Lawless has a blog post on Thom Rainer’s blog offering some ways to do exactly that!  From his blog post:

Consider these steps for teaching theology in your church:

  1. Don’t assume that your church members don’t care about beliefs. Too many church leaders give up on teaching theology before they even try. “Nobody cares about theology any more,” they think. Not only does this thinking ultimately question the power of the Word, but it also denies reality. It is precisely because people do care about beliefs that they turn to places and people other than the church for their belief system. Where the church fails, somebody else fills the void.

  2. Realize that attending worship and small groups does not automatically lead to doctrinal fidelity. Here, I am NOT suggesting that preaching and Bible study are unimportant to teaching doctrine; indeed, good doctrinal training does not happen apart from preaching and teaching the Word. I am simply arguing that our church members don’t typically hear our teaching and automatically connect the dots to form a biblical theology. Teaching good theology must happen intentionally.

  3. Include basic theology in a required membership classIn some ways, the best time to teach the basics is when a person first follows Christ or first joins the church—when he or she is most focused on a Christian commitment. Capitalize on that enthusiasm by teaching early the inerrancy and authority of the Bible. Show why the exclusivity of Christ is non-negotiable. Talk about the necessity of the death of Christ. Build the theological foundation early, and build it well.

  4. Take advantage of doctrine studies. Churches don’t need to “reinvent the wheel” to teach theology. Case in point, Lifeway Christian Resources has developed The Gospel Project (a journey through the basics of biblical and systematic theology over a three-year period), The God Who Speaks (a study of the doctrine of revelation), and Read the Bible for Life (a 9-session study that equips individuals and churches to understand the Bible better). If we believe that theology matters, why not take advantage of already-prepared material and teach a current study? Plan extensively, promote well, and prioritize this type of study.

  5. Raise the bar for small group leaders who teach the WordThese leaders have a great opportunity—perhaps one of the best in the church—to influence lives through teaching small groups. Few other leaders have such a ready hearing. For that reason, we must hold group leaders accountable to holy living, sound doctrine, and good teaching. We should not be surprised when members view doctrine as boring after lackluster teachers have taught it. There is simply no excuse for allowing untrained, unfaithful, or boring teachers to drain the life out of Bible studies.

  6. Begin in the homeTeach parents biblical doctrine, and then help them teach their own children accordingly. Because Deuteronomy 6:7 and Ephesians 6:4 demand nothing less from believing parents, our churches should work in cooperation with them—not replace them—in teaching theology to the next generation. Provide good resources that teach basic truths at a child’s level without compromising scriptural teachings, but expect parents to do the teaching.

  7. Be willing to start with the fewJust as Jesus did, focus on the few rather than the many. For example, invite a few men to join you in studying theology one morning each week. Give them the Bible and a basic theology textbook, and challenge them to study the week’s lesson. If you prepare and teach well, you will likely be surprised at how interested the men are. Those men and their families will be stronger because they are learning the Word.

So what do you think?  Is thins something you could do or are doing?  How do you most typically go about it?

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He bears our grief and our sorrows.

Join me in prayer for Rick Warren and his family as they grieve the death of their son to suicide.

My prayer for today is for all my friends, our families and extended circle of friends and myself; that we will know the comfort of Christ through our own journeys of grief. That his peace will cover over us and his hope well up within us, and his strength flow through us –and we have an ever increasing awareness of his immeasurable love for us.

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Healing Service Experience.

I have done a number of posts on the subject of healing which you can find here and hereThe subject of healing has been a topic that is close to my heart, as I have been recovering from a major debilitating illness since 2007. This year as I resumed my studies, I took the elective subject on healing and part of our brief was to attend a healing service, in which we have to write a debrief on the experience, and a group of us from college attended St Andrews Cathedral’s healing service.

I was in the interesting place of being both an active observer within an academic framework in which I was to fulfil my course requirements, as well as being an active participant in which I sought personal prayers for healing. It may surprise some of my readers and those who know me that I have a tendency towards having a depressive / anxious personality and that I also suffer post traumatic stress disorder. It’s true that I battle through it and possibly hide it from all but those who are closest to me, and therefore seem to live a fairly functional life. This is also compounded by the physical remnants that the viral encephalitis caused my body and memory and so I tend to fatigue very easily.

Over the years I have had some very good and positive experiences of healing and prayer, though this positive experience was before I collapsed in October 2007. Since then my experience has been a less than positive one, and so within the subject of healing, I came to distrust any Christian who wanted to take me to a healing service, and or pray for me. And so there have been few who I actually trust enough to share and have them pray with me, though, deep down, I have a deep yearning to do so.

What struck me as I entered the building tonight was the high degree of warmth and acceptance by those greeting me. Because of the train times I arrived 1/2 an hour earlier and had an interesting discussion with an older man who greeted me at the door. As people passed by, he would stop and introduce me to them and share with me their position or role within the service. The service started at 6 pm and finished around 7:15pm, followed by supper. The service consisted of 3 songs, the sermon, another song, the Lords prayer and a benediction, which we sung to each other. The time of prayer came after the sermon in which anyone who would like prayer were invited to put their hand up. The prayers could be for self or another person…and after the service, we were further invited to come down the front, where one of the elders would anoint us with oil and further prayer. Those leading the service did a great job of not assuming any of the visitors would know what was going on, and the service leader told us, what we would be doing, who would be doing what and who would be doing what – including pointing to an area where one of their pastors would be able to answer any questions one had about the Christian faith and questions about the healing ministry.

The result was that I couldn’t help but get drawn into the atmosphere of the night which generated a lot of trust. Granted, walking into the old but renewed cathedral is breathtaking, and one can’t help but be drawn towards the majesty of God. During the time of the service, I put up my hand to request prayer, and it was one of the gentlemen who met me at the door who came over. And I requested that he prayed for me in the area of my easily fatiguing. After a little more discussion, he asked permission to lay his hand on my shoulder and asked the Lord to heal and strengthen me. As he did, I was filled with a warmth that permeated deep within my very being, that seemed to fill me, flow out of me and cover over me and I could sense God’s love in a very real and tangible way.

I also went down the front at the end of the service to be anointed with oil, and when asked what I wanted to be prayed for, I shared about the PTS and so she thoughtfully and quietly prayed and then prayed for me as she anointed my head with oil. One of the things I found that surprised me was that I could breath, and breath deeply. I find it hard to normally breath through my nose and yet during this time of prayer, I could feel my lungs filling up, the air flowing freely through my nostrils and once again a feeling of warmth filling my inner being once again.

All said and done, tonight was a deeply positive experience and I came away with the deep impression of having met with God once again in a very real and tangible expression of his love. 

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If I Could Do It Again, What Would I Do Differently?

Over the last few months, I have given a great deal of thought to the question, “If I could do it again, what would I do differently in my life?” I have broken it down into 4 catagories: my relationship with God, my relationship with my family, and my relationship with the church, and my relationship with the world. I have been journeling on the things that I would change and the things that I would not change. The things that I would never do again and the things that I would do even more. It has been an interesting journey.

As I have reflected on my observations, I have decided that I need to pass on the wisdom that I have learned to others. As a husband and father, I have frequently talked to my wife and sons about things that I have done that I feel needs to be changed. Many times I have written them a note that reflected the changes that I felt that I needed to make as well as asking them for forgiveness for mistakes that I have made. This process, while it has been difficult at times, has also been a great time of growth and open communication that has helped all of us mature in our relationships.

I also feel that what I am learning would make a great sermon series and would encouarge people to evaluate their life to see where they might need to make changes in order be a mature and growing believer.

If you could do it all over again, what would you do differently? I would greatly appreciate hearing about any lessons that you have learned and wisdom that you have gained in your journey. We all need help from each other on our journey and I would welcome your thoughts and your wisdom.

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The Pastor as Spiritual Director

This is part 8 of my series on Eugene Peterson’s definition of the pastoral vocation. The rest can be viewed here.

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Spiritual direction is a bit of a buzz word at the moment. But long before there were Masters Degrees and DMin’s specialising in spiritual direction Eugene Peterson used the word to describe one of three foundational elements of the pastoral vocation. When Peterson uses the term he mixes both leadership and what might be more commonly known as pastoral care. It is another element of his spiritual leadership approach. Essentially it assumes the person before us, the pastor, is worthy of our full attention.

In the same way that pastors are tempted to depersonalise prayer and the reading of Scripture, people are equally likely to fall victim to the pastor’s impersonal approach. Peterson notes: “The culture conditions us to approach people and situations as journalists…But the Scriptures and our best pastoral traditions train us in a different approach: notice the small, persevere in the commonplace, appreciate the obscure.”[1]

Spiritual direction, according to Peterson, is the act in which the pastor pays attention to the person and what it is that God is doing in them.  It refuses to dehumanise a person to what they can do.[2] The pastor as spiritual director makes and takes time to sit with people. This is not an act in which the pastor conveys knowledge or offers quick fix solutions. Rather, the pastor as spiritual director guides people to Jesus. “The basic requirement of being a spiritual director is simply to take seriously what we already know are serious matters – a sign of grace here, a desire for prayer there – and shape the agenda of our work from the souls of people we meet, not from the demands to which they give voice”[3]

These three acts of prayer, Scripture and spiritual direction form Eugene Peterson’s pastoral ascetic and are the disciplines by which the pastoral vocation maintains its integrity. They are the acts which ground the more visible acts of preaching, pastoral care, and administration. As previously mentioned they are not the only three practices of ministry but they do, according to Peterson, form the pastoral aesthetic by which the pastor pays attention to God throughout their day, thus preserving the integrity of the vocation as it is given witness in Scripture and through tradition.

In a world that has dehumanised almost every interaction between humans into technological or contractual exchanges, and a church culture more interested in using people than loving them, the pastor reminds people that someone cares and that God is with them. The pastor is one who is contemplative in prayer, attentive to Scripture, and aware of the human soul.

In light of this I close with one of my favourite Peterson quotes: ‎”The job of the Pastor is to get to know God well and people well and then introduce the two of them!” Sounds easy but take it from me, it is not!

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Bible Reading Plans For 2013

When I was a student in Bible College, one of my professors encouraged us to read through the Psalms and the Proverbs each month. I listened to his wisdom and for most of the last 35 years I have read 5 Psalms and 1 chapter of Proverbs each day. As I have read the Psalms and the Proverbs, they have become treasured friends and a wonderful source of encouragement, direction, and strength. I love David’s heart for his God and Solomon’s concise wisdom for the day. I am in awe of the power of the words of David and Solomon inspired by God 3000 years ago to touch my heart today. I would encourage you to read through the Psalms and the Proverbs and see how God touches and changes your heart.

I am also reading through the Bible this year from a chronological Bible. This is a different format than I have used before and I am looking forward to the adventure of reading the complete consolidated story of the Bible.

What Bible reading plans have you used for yourself or your congregation? What did you like or not like. What worked or did not work?

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What did Seminary not teach you?

Dave posted a link to some advice HB London gave some seminary students at Dallas Theological Seminary recently. 10 Things they didn’t teach me in seminary. I can resonate with the list and ironically I learnt more in Bible College about these things than seminary! What do you think, what else could you add to the list? Personally I love number 8 & 9!

  1. They did not teach me how to love. That came through experience.
  2. I did not really understand how complicated the lives of people really were. Some of them were too broken to mend.
  3. I was surprised at how judgmental and cruel Christian people could be. Graduate school did not warn me, or at least if they did I didn’t listen.
  4. I probably needed more specific training in problem solving, and crisis management.
  5. In my day there was not much attention being given to financial management. Even though my first assignment was small, I was still a 23 year old CEO. Scary.
  6. I do not recall much attention being given to family matters. In fact, I remember some well-meaning leader saying to me, “You just go out and serve the church. God will take care of your family.” It didn’t happen that way.
  7. There is no way you can prepare for loneliness. But the importance of friendship with colleagues should have been reinforced.
  8. Another problem I would have to deal with, and had to learn on the fly, was that the church was God’s church … not mine. I was an under-shepherd.
  9. I had to learn how to be myself and build on my own strength. Seminary had made me into a kind of cookie-cutter presenter.
  10. Pastoring was not for the faint of heart. Probably, if they had told me everything I would never have completed my training. I am so glad they didn’t, and I am so glad I did.

With the advent of missional leadership programs, Biblical studies majors and leadership focus in Seminary programs something has to give. I am fearful that what little formation for the pastoral vocation was included in seminary curriculum’s will disappear. What happened to training pastors to be pastors. What happened to teaching pastors to weep with those who weep. To love their wives like Christ loved the church. To read their Bible and hear the Word of God? When did we stop teaching pastors how to be pastors? When we focus so much much on growth and style we soon lose sight of the gospel and those things that keep us faithful in our gospel vocations. I’m not saying we don’t need to learn about mission or even leadership. I’m just saying these things should not be at the expense of the vocation itself!

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“Peace In The Midst Of The Storm”

In August of 1998, during a very difficult time in our lives, my wife wrote this song that expressed the deep pain in our lives as well as our deep trust in our God to somehow see us through our valley to a place of victory.

“PEACE IN THE MIDST OF THE STORM”

VERSE 1:
Picking up the fragments of my broken dreams;
All my hopes and plans are gone or so it seems.
Nights are unending and full of countless fears;
I’ve cried and cried until there are no more tears.

When the whirlwind of life comes around;
When all of my world comes tumbling down.
With a heart that is breaking,
And a soul that is aching;
It’s then that I know,
Where I must go.

CHORUS:
I run into His loving arms and find my shelter there.
I look into his tender eyes and see how much He cares.
I can trust His plan, wherever it may lead.
In each circumstance, He knows my ev’ry need.

Though the storm of life still rages,
I’m safe in the Rock of ages.
There can be peace in the midst of the storm.
He gives me peace in the midst of the storm.

VERSE 2:
Trials overwhelming and worries pressing in;
Efforts that are futile, it seems I cannot win.
Crushed by the burdens and driven to despair;
I cry out to God, “It’s more than I can bear.”

When the whirlwind of life comes around,
When all of my world is tumbling down.
With a heart that is breaking,
And a soul that is aching;
It’s then that I know,
Where I must go.

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Don’t Ever Give Up

Stork and Frog in color, Dont Ever Give Up

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by | December 7, 2012 · 11:33 am

“Walking In A Fog”

On Saturday morning, August 13th, 2011, I was sitting at my desk in my office reviewing my sermon for the weekend. I decided to make a few changes, so I picked up a red pen to rewrite a few lines. The pen was not working, so I took a note pad and tried to get it to work. What happened next totally surprised me. As the pen started to work, words begin to pour out of my heart to my pen and I wrote “Walking In A Fog” in less than 5 minutes. I had no intention of writing what I wrote. It just happened. I wish that everything that I wrote would come so easy.

WALKING IN A FOG
By Ron Wipf
August 13, 2011

Today I don’t know what to do.
I don’t know which way to go or which way to turn.
I don’t know where I am going.
I am walking in a fog.
But I am walking.

I am walking towards the light that I do see.
I am walking in the wisdom that I do know.
I am walking in the truth that You have revealed to me.
I am listening for Your voice to come out of my confusion.
I am walking in a fog.
But I am walking.

I cannot see a way through my crisis, yet I know that You are guiding me.
I do see Your provisions and blessings for me in countless ways.
Without Your constant guidance in the fog I would have been lost years ago.
I am walking in a fog.
But I am walking.

I do not like much of this unknown journey.
But I do like following You.
I do not like the pain and sorrow that floods my soul in the dark hours of the night.
But I do like the comfort that You bring.
I do not like being in the fog so much of the time.
But I do like Your presence.
I do like seeing Your hand extended on my behalf.
I do like the strength that comes from Your word, the peace that comes from Your Spirit,
and the encouragement that comes from the touch of friends.
I am walking in a fog.
But I am walking.

I am walking in a fog.
But I am following Your voice.
I am waiting for the fog to clear.
And while I am waiting for things to be revealed,
I will walk towards what I see and hear You saying to me.
I am still in a fog.
But I am walking.

Hebrews 11:1 “Now Faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see.”

Hebrews 11:8 “By faith Abraham when called to go to a place he would later receive as his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he did not know where he was going.”

Psalms 77:19-20 Your path led through the sea, your way through the mighty waters, though your

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