Thursday 3 November 2022

Peter Anderson: Prayer

 Every miracle has a genealogy. 

Prayer throughout the book of Acts... devotional study idea!

Four principles for effective prayer:

1) Prayer + the will of God = effective prayer

1 John 5 vs James 1

1 John: If you ask anything according ot his will he hears us, hears us, God serving prayers

James you don't have becasue you don't ask with right motives. he doesn't hear us, self-willed prayers.

"If I throw out a boathook from the boat and catch hold of the shore and pull, do I pull the shore to me, or do I pull myself to the shore? Prayer is not pulling God to my will, but the aligning of my will to the will of God." E. Stanley Jones.

Daniel 9: "I daniel understood from the scriptures... so i turned to the lord and pleaded with him.."

We have to develop a closeness with the Spirit.

When you pray in tongues you are praying completely in line with the will of God... but you have no idea what you're praying about. 

I pray in tongues more than any of you. Why? Because of faith. it bypasses our minds, that if our minds knew what we were praying about they'd shut down the request with doubt.

"The heavens are the heavens of the lord but the earth he has given to the sons of men." - Psalm 115:16

God in his sovereignty has sovereignly decided to put us in charge. Like a landlord who puts tenants in charge of his property, he gives up his rights to access and enter whenever he wants. 

The devil had been given the kingdoms of the earth, we gave him our keys... but Jesus (Mt. 28) got it back on behalf of mankind.

John Wesley: God does nothing but in answer to prayer.

2) Prayer + agreeing with people = effective prayer

Matthew 19:18 'if any of you agree... (symphoneo) on anything together...'

A. T. Pierson. "There has never been a spiritual awakening in any country or locality that did not begin in united prayer."

3) Prayer + fasting = effective prayer

Planting church in Gambi Nigeria. 

Daniel fast. Why is fasting so effective? It is a God given mechanism for triggering humility in your soul. 

David said: "I humbled my soul with fasting..." Psalm 35:13

It triggers humility in my soul. One of the most common reasons for unanswered prayers is pride. 

Universal truth because it happens in heaven as in earth. "Those who humble themselves will be humbled, those who humble themselves will be exalted." Augustine called pride the mother of all sins: it gives birth to all the other sins.

There's a lot of nonsense when it comes to thinking about spiritual warfare. 

Jesus dealt with the devil but he never left the ground. Did Daniel have any idea what was going on? no. Did he address the angelic realm? no. did Daniel's prayer effective what was going on in the heavenlies? yes.

4) Prayer + perseverance = effective prayer

Amplified version of Luke 11. Ask and keep on asking...

Consider the difference between impetus and momentum. "if prayer is ever forgotten the revival will move from impetus to momentum." think of cars. impetus is the accelerator pedal. momentum is once we've already got going, but if we take foot off pedal we'll start to slow down.

George Muller. The great point is to never give up...

Wednesday 10 August 2022

Multiplanting by Colin Baron

 Part One - Multiplanting and the Big Church Dream

In Matthew 15 Jesus saw great ministry success only to then leave the town and go somewhere else. Colin says:

"In Many churches today there is a Capernaum mindset. We (rightly) celebrate the good things that God is doing in our areas, and we dream, strategise and pray about how we can maximise these things. But in doing so, the danger is that we miss the bigger opportunity that is before us."

On Matthew 9 (harvest is plentiful...):

What can we do when the need is so great and our capacity to reach those people barely scratches the surface of what is required? Jesus responded by doing two things: He asked for prayer about the situation, and he multiplied his pioneering ministry. 

Again:

Prayer is vital. But prayer is not the only thing that Jesus did.

Colin says of Jesus' strategy:

Even though many people had been healed, fed, taught and delivered from demons under Jesus' own ministry, there were so many more to get to that Jesus split his twelve apostles into pairs and sent them out to do the ministry that he had been doing. 

He went from: one to six to 36 (sending of 72).

Jesus' strategy in his ministry was a simple one: He wanted to get the good news to all the villages of Israel, and he knew that to do this he would need to go to them... Staying in one place and hoping the impact would spread to the edges wasn't enough.

On the Great Commission:

The commission was never just to build a big church but to make disciples of the nations, and by the time we reach Antioch in Acts 11, this was starting to take place.

The call to reach a region really ought to be part of the DNA of every church, and I constantly find myself both challenged and inspired by the scope of the apostolic vision.

On clarity of vision and mission:

The word 'division' literally means two visions, and Jesus himself taught that a house divided against itself cannot stand.

The problem is that:

for many churches, multiplication is an afterthought...

Chapter 4: How to start new sites

There is a diagram of a baseball diamond that features the four stages:

1) Talk it up

2) Midweek meeting

3) Sunday Meeting

4) Established 

It also has a section 'Ready to bat' for new and emerging leaders and believers hungry to go.

Stage 1:

What we are trying to do through this is to unearth a few people who feel stirred by God that this is for them.

and then:

We are looking to get to the point where we have four or five people who are interested in trying to make something happen in that particular community.

Stage 2:

I find somebody who is organised enough to pull together a meeting each week and hospitable enough to create a fun atmosphere, and ask them to make the midweek group happen. They are a bridgehead for us into the community, but this doesn't necessarily mean they will be asked to lead the site as it moves into the next stages.

Stage 3:

We draft in reinforcements from other sites.

We know that in the early days people are unlikely to be attracted to a new plant because of spectacular Sunday worship services, but we do want everyone who walks through the door to experience teaching that they can connect with and worship that helps them engage with God. Alongside this we put a very high premium on hospitality and community. When there is just a small number, people have the opportunity to help newcomers feel like part of the community very quickly, and this is one of the biggest assets of a church at this stage.

PUTTING IT INTO PRACTISE:

Without vision it is impossible to advance. This vision can come from many places, but it is cultivated above all through prayer and intimacy with the Father.

Question:

How big is your vision? Do you have dreams beyond your own church of reaching the region in which you are based? What are you doing to turn those dreams into reality?

Part Two: Multiplanting Culture 

Culture is about the way things are done right now, and every church has a culture, whether it has been deliberately crafted or not.

Leaders: you are the visual aid that will reinforce the culture that you are building. 

Their seven cultures are:

1. A Second Chance Culture: Being quick to apologise and quick to forgive.

I have often thought about the topic of second chance and maturity in relation to Jesus' disciples. It seems like they were more 'mature' on the day they first heard Jesus' call and dropped their nets to follow than they were after three years with him when they returned to their nets out of fear, despondency and disappointment.

Great quote:

Maturity is forged on the front lines of the battle, ad so we must resist the temptation to make maturity a prerequisite for ministry. 

Colin says that they regularly say:

We have both a 'very high bar' and a 'very low bar'. The high bar is aspirational and describes the standard that we hold out for discipleship. We are wholehearted in pursuit of God and don't want to settle for compromise in our walks with him. As we look to work with believers, we recognise there are always new steps that we can take in our faith journeys and we urge and support everyone to a very high standard of love, faith and devotion. At the same time we have a very low bar of getting started. We want to create opportunities for people to do meaningful things, even when their lives are still messy (we take our cue here from the opportunities that Jesus gave to the twelve). We believe that it is through these opportunities that people will begin to learn, grow and move towards the high bar. 

2. A Have A Go Culture

Because we know that God has made promises for the future, we are willing to step out and try things in the present that might work and might not, knowing that ultimately, by his power, the promises will be fulfilled.

On Jonathan and Armour Bearer:

There are few things that drain faith from the people of God quicker than inertia, particularly when it seems like even the leaders have no compelling faith or narrative of what God is doing. 

When nothing is happening in your church, sometimes all that is needed to break the blockage is just to do something. Especially when that something is full of faith.

On the apostles' approach:

Guided by the general instruction to make disciples to the ends of the earth, they seemed very ready to take a shot at whatever opportunities came their way, knowing that sometimes it would work well, and other times less so.

Part of the reason that our churches can get stuck today is our tendency to wait for too much certainty before we are willing to acts. We often look for multiple prophetic words from distinct and reliable sources, coupled with a strategic plan and set of resources that can handle any eventuality. Prophetic words and strategic plans are good but there is also a place sometimes for just stepping out in faith with one or two others, having a go at something and seeing if God is in it as you go. 

Keep the risks low whilst the potential gains remain high.

On the armour bearer and Jonathan going up to the Philistines:

The so-called adventure with God at this stage amounted to little more than scrambling up a hill on all fours. It wasn't easy and it wasn't glamorous. Stepping out with God rarely is.

3. A Think the Best Culture

Don't write people off before they start...

Sadly, this is exactly the premise from which many church leaders begin. I can think of lots of conversations that I have had with leaders who can find a reason why pretty much everybody they can think of shouldn't take on responsibility. 

Andrew Carnegie was an American businessman famous for developing people. How did he do it? He said:

Men are developed the same way gold is mined. Several tons of dirt must be moved to get an ounce of gold... but you don't go into a mine looking for dirt, you go looking for gold. That's exactly they way to develop positive people. Look for the gold, not the dirt; the good, not the bad. The more positive qualities you look for, the more you are going to find.

The bottom line is that whichever of these we look for, we will find.

Honouring others and treating people with honour sits right at the heart of the Think the Best Culture.

One of my elders who is based in a poorer part of town, recently invited a couple of new guys to the church to join him for a McDonalds after the service, and they were visibly very moved to be invited - they went on to tell him that nobody had ever invited them for food before.

It comes down to treating people, like people.

Great John Maxwell quote:

Anyone can see people as they are. It takes a leader to see what they can become, encourage them to grow in that direction, and believe that they will do it. People always grow towards a leader's expectations.

How can anyone think the best of someone when their default is to assume the worst? 

A Generous Culture
A Forward Looking Culture
A Wholehearted Culture
A Good Food Culture


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday 25 May 2022

The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self - Carl Trueman

 notes and quotes

1. Reimagining the Self

Charles Taylor, Canadian philosopher. Coined term 'social imaginary'

I want to speak of 'social imaginary' here, rather than social theory, because there are important difference between the two. There are, in fact, several differences. I speak of 'imaginary' (i) because I'm talking about the ordinary people 'imagine' their social surroundings, and this is often not expressed in theoretical terms, it is carried in images, stories, legends, etc. But it is also the case that (ii) theory is often the possession of a small minority, whereas what is interesting in the social imaginary is that is is shared by large groups of people, if not the whole society. Which leads to a third difference: (iii) the social imaginary is that common understanding which makes possible common practices and a widely shared sense of legitimacy.

Taylor says that the social imaginary... refers to the myriad beliefs, practise, normative expectations, and even implicit assumptions that members of a society share and that shape their daily lives. It is not so much a conscious philosophy of life as a set of intuitions and practices. 

Philip Reif. Late Professor of Sociology at University of Pennsylvania:

Wrote a book in 1966 entitled 'The Triumph of the Therapeutic'. He says that cultures are primarily defined by what they forbid.

A culture survives principally... by the power of its institutions to bind and loose men in the conduct of their affairs with reasons which sink so deep into the self that they become commonly and implicitly understood.

A second important aspect for Rieff is the idea that culture, at least historically, directs the individual outward. It is in communal activities that individuals find their true selves; the true self in traditional cultures is therefore something that is given and learned, not something that the individual creates for himself. 

historical moments.

Rieff argues that the way a society constructed its members to think changes over time and that broadly speaking the different moments and social identities can be labelled as follows:

Political man. From the sort of ideas put forth by Plato and Aristotle. In contrast to the idiotic man (literally, the private man), the political man is the one who finds his identity in the activities in which he engages in the public life of the city.

Religious man. eventually political man gave way to the man of the Middle Ages, the man who found his primary sense of self in his involvement in religious activities: attending mass, celebrating feast days, taking part in religious processions, going on pilgrimages. This can also be seen in the way medieval society was structured - from the dominance of the church buildings to the liturgical calendar that marked time itself. Religion was the key to culture during this time.

Economic man. Economic man is the individual who finds his sense of self in his economic activity: trade, production, the making of money. Rieff himself saw economic man as an unstable and temporary category. Economic man gave way (owing to the continuously revolutionising nature of capitalisms impact on production) to...

Psychological man. Defined not by outward things but by the inward quest for personal psychological happiness. Rieff says that psychological categories and an inward focus are the hallmarks of being a modern person. This is what Charles Taylor refers to as 'expressive individualism'.

Expressive individualism: the idea that each of us finds our meaning by giving expression to our own feelings and desires. for Taylor, this kind of self exists in what he describes as a culture of authenticity. He defines this culture of authenticity in the following way:

The understanding of life which emerges with the Romantic expressivism of the late eighteenth century, that each of us has his/her own way of realising our humanity and that it is important to find and live out one's own, as against surrendering to conformity with a model imposed on us from outside, by society, or the previous generation, or religious or political authority.

This shift to psychological man and expressive individualism is far reaching in its implications. 

Trueman uses the following example to illustrate:

My grandfather left school at fifteen and spent the rest of his working life as a sheet metal worker in a factory in Birmingham, the industrial heartland of England. If he had been asked if he found satisfaction in his work, there is a distinct possibility he would not even have understood the question, given that it really reflects the concerns of psychological man's world, to which he did not belong. But if he did understand, he would probably have answered in terms of whether his work gave him the money to put food on his family's table and shoes on his children's feet. If it did so, then yes he would have affirmed that his job satisfied him. His needs were those of his family, and in enabling him to meet them, his work gave him satisfaction... If I am asked the same question, my instinct is to talk about the pleasure that teaching gives me, about the sense of personal fulfillment I feel when a student learns a new idea of becomes excited about some concept as a result of my classes. The difference is stark: for my grandfather, job satisfaction was empirical, outwardly directed, and unrelated to his psychological states; for members of mine and subsequent generations, the issue of feeling is central.


Chapter 4. The unacknowledged legislators

Bad ages produce bad poets and have their decadence and moral decline reinforced thereby. Virtuous ages produce virtuous poets and have their greatness and moral superiority strengthened thereby. And in this turn means that the poet is someone of great political significance: both a sign of the moral strength of the times and a means for maintaining the same.


/PART 4 - triumphs of the revolution

8 triumph of the erotic

Surrealism. The name given to a school of artistic expression that emerged in the first half of the twentieth century... there were many aspects to the surrealist project but the nature of the self and of identity was central... the foundation for surrealist though was Freud. The artistic philosophy that it espoused sought to give concrete artistic expressionto the unconscious, following Freu'd idea that everything there - evertyhing - is significant. 

Dream. Dreams were important to surrealism since in dreams the dreamer is able to be whoever or whatever she wanst to be in whatever kind of world she chooses to envisage. .. and that points to the basic contention that it is the unconscious that is thr realbedrock of the indivifusl identity, the thing about the person that is most real.  

Building on Rouseau: tge nisr authentic self is the self that is totally detached from and uninhibated by any of the conditions of material life. 

The message of surrealist thought is clear enough: The unconscious is the guide to truth. For the surrealists, it was key to individual authenticity... that which has always been assumed to be obvious [material/social realities say] is to be regarded as inauthentic or problematic.

Later Truman says: the purpose of surrealism was profoundaly and aggresively political: to overthrow Christianity and its corollariers - families and moral codes governing secial behaviour)

Surrealisms legacy... what it did was a play a part in the general and radical eroticization of modernity. It did not simply make sexual images more widely available under cover of intellectual responsibly; it actually served to help the process by which society's judgment of the cultural value of pornogrpahy changed frm seomthign bad and detrimental to something good and healthy.

The pornification of Mainstream Culture:

By the time of his death aged 91 in 2017 Hugh Hefner was a classic exampe of a hero of the anticulture... his life had bee dedicated to overthrowing the sexual codes of earlier generations and his career proved thr truth of the old adage 'sex sells'.

But consider how tame the extreme Play Boy of the 60s looks compared to casual viewing on Netflix. Gail Dines professor of sociology and women's studies at Wheelock College says: Today there is almost no soft-core porn on the internet, because more of it has migrated into pop culture. 

Interesting observation of the changes:

Commenting on American women's magazines in 1946 George Orwell made the following observation:

Someone has sent me a copy of an American fashion magazine which shall remain nameless. It consists of 325 large quarto pages of which no fewer than 15 are given up to articles on world politics, literature, etc. The rest consists entirely of picture with a littler letterpress creeping round their edges: picture of ball dresses, mink coats, step-ins, panties, brassieres, silk stockings, slippers, perfumes, lipsticks, nail varnish - and of course f the women wearing unrelievedly beautiful who wear them or make use of them... 

One striking thing when one looks at these pictures is the overbred, exhausted, even decadent style of beauty that now seems to be striven after. Nearly all of these women are immensely elongated... A fairly didilgent search through the magazine reveals two discreet allusions to grey hair, but if there is anywhere a direct mention of fatness or middle-age i have not found it. Birth and death are not mentioned either: nor is work, except a few recipes for breakfast dishes are given.

Truman says:

The desctription speaks eloquently of the American preoccupation with physical beauty, but what is really interesting about Orwell's commentary is how unsexy it is. there is a matter-of-fact nonerotic aspect to the mannger in which he describes the few articles the magazine contains and even the representation of the female form.

Comparing this to today Cosmopolitan magazine he says: the cult of beauty has become the cult of sexuality.

The Triumph of the T: 

Where a sense of psycholigcal well-being is the purpose of life, therapy supplants morality - or perhaps better, therapy is morality - ad anything that achieves that sense of well-being is good. 

Being a woman is now somethign that can be produced by a technique - literally prescribed by a doctor. The pain, the struggle, and the history of oppression that shape what it means to be a woman in society are thus trivilised and rendered irrelevant. 

Jenner's 2015 cover for Vanity Fair and the accompanying photo shoot all operated within the aesthetic norms of standard American cover girls.

Germaine Greer:

No so-called sex-change has ever begged for a uterus-and-overies transplant; if uterus-and-overies transplants were made mandatory for wannabe women they would disappear overnight.

Concluding Prologue:

What should the church do?

1) The church should reflect long and hard on the connection between aesthetics and her core beliefs and practice. 

The highest form of authority in an age of expressive individualism is - personal testimony. This concern for personal testimonies reflect the power of sympathy and empathy in shaping morality. 

Mario Vargas Llosa writes: Today images have primacy over ideas. For that reason, cinema, television and now the internet have left books to one side.

The role of aesthetics through images created by camera angles and plotlines in movies, sitcoms and sopa operas is powerful. 

The biblical narrative rests on (and only makes sense in light of) a deeper metaphysical reality: the being of God and his act of creation.

2) The church must be a community. Hegel's basic insight so compellingly elaborated by Taylor, that selves are socially constructed and only come to full self-consciousness in dialogue with other self-consciousnesses if of great importance. Each of us is in a snese, the sum total of the network of relationships we have with others and with our environment. 

The task of the church in cultivating a different understanding of the self is, humanly speaking, likely to provoke despair. Yet there is hope: the world in which we live is now witness to commmunities in flux. The nation-stae no longer provides identity as the globalised world makes it seem impotaent and decades of being told in the West that patriotism is bad have taken thteir toll... Many cities are anonymous places and suburbs function as giant commuter motels. 

3) Protestants need to recover both natural law and a high view of the physical body. It is unlikely that an individual pastor is going to be able to shape a Supreme Court ruling on abortion (though he should certainly try if he is able), but he is very likely to be confronted with congregants asking questions about matters from surrogacy to transgenderism. And in such circumstances, a good grasp of the biblical position on natural law and the order of the created world will prove invaluable. 

One last comment.

Hisotrical precedent. 

We can't look to a high point in R. Caholic or Protestant history for help. But if there is histrocail precedent it is earlier: the second entury.

In the second century the church was a marginal sect within a dominant pluralist society... the second century world is in a sense our world where Christianity is a choice - and a choice likely at some point to run afoul of the authorities. 

It was the Second century world of course that alid doen the foundations for the later successes of the third and fourth centuries. Annd she did it by what means? By existing as a close-knit doctrinally bounded community that required her members to act consistently with their faith and to be good citizens of the earthly city as far as good citizenship was compatible with faithfulness to Christ.