A Week on the Merry-Go-Round

Series | The Lord’s Day Obviously our whole lives are to be worship; worship is more than just a Sunday activity even though I’ve tried to make the case that there is something special about the Lord’s day. Not only that, there may be times when the best way for us to worship on a given Sunday means we might miss the meeting of the church. Yet I do believe our customary course toward the corporate meeting of the church on the first day of the week should be like water in a steep, downhill pipe.

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Passionately Exult in Worship

Series | The Lord’s Day This is the fourth piece of practical advice for how to regard the Lord’s day as the best day. 4. Celebrate Isn’t this the whole point? Anticipation and participation and concentration culminate in worship. Sunday service is not a funeral, it is a solemn party of praise for our risen Savior! Surely there is a place for repentance, for mourning and sorrow over sin, but didn’t Jesus say those were the truly happy (blessed) people (Matthew 5:3-4)?

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Intently Endeavor to Worship

Series | The Lord’s Day Here is the third piece of practical advice for how to regard the Lord’s day as the best day. 3. Concentrate Each piece of advice flows naturally into the next. If the Lord’s day is worth our anticipation and participation, certainly it deserves our concentration. Free from Distraction It’s not just the leader’s responsibility to create an atmosphere that is as free from distraction as possible.

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Hohenschönhausen is Happening

One of our new youth staff, Kim Weinberg, arrived in Hohenschönhausen, Berlin safe and sound. She’ll be serving the Green family for almost two months. I know she would appreciate your prayers.

Actively Engage in Worship

Series | The Lord’s Day Here is the second piece of practical advice for how to regard the Lord’s day as the best day. 2. Participate By Getting There Sheesh. Do I really need to say that? Apparently I do. It’s part of the reason I’m writing about the Lord’s day in the first place. It is true that no explicit command for church worship services on Sunday can be found in Scripture.

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Eagerly Expect to Worship

Series | The Lord’s Day I previously promised four pieces of practical advice for how to regard the Lord’s day as the best day. Here is the first. 1. Anticipate In other words, prepare for Sunday. Think about it ahead of time. Look forward, count down, and get ready.1 In Your Schedule I understand that life responsibilities do not cease just because it’s Sunday. But if we are serious about honoring the Lord on His day, it will require some effort on our part to forecast what needs to get done and then to do all the things we can before Sunday so that we can participate in as many the events of the body as possible without distraction.

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The Best Day

Series | The Lord’s Day A pastor friend of mine who helps lead a local body on the Lord’s day typically posts the order of service on Saturday so the sheep can prepare. He titled his post a few weeks ago, “Getting ready for the Best Day of the Week.” I’ve been thinking about that ever since. The Lord’s day, the first day, is the best day of the week for Christians.

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Caveats and Clarification on First Day Conduct

Series | The Lord’s Day Our Lord’s day practices require consideration and sometimes qualification. Even so, the following ammendments will be of no avail if you haven’t read the previous post on first day activities. First, I am not saying we must do each one of the first day activities every Sunday in order to properly observe the Lord’s day. There are no commands for proper protocol or procedure of worship services like we conduct today.

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The First Day

Series | The Lord’s Day The first day of the week, Sunday, was and is the Lord’s day. While the title “Lord’s day” is only used in Revelation 1:10, “first day” is a common identification of the day when believers gathered. In the Old Testament, Israel was commanded to keep the Sabbath; to set apart the seventh day of the week (Saturday) and rest from their work just as God rested from His work of creation.

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The Lord's Day

Series | The Lord’s Day George Orwell said, Sometimes the first duty of intelligent men is the restatement of the obvious. I’m not claiming intelligence, but I do think some restatement of the obvious regarding the Lord’s day is an eternally and spiritually intelligent thing to do. Even the phrase itself, the Lord’s day is instructive. It isn’t just Sunday or the first day of the calendar week or the last day of your weekend.

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The Gospel in Six Minutes

This video of The Gospel in 6 Minutes is a terrific asset for both evangelism and edification. I benefited from it so much I added it to the one28 About page.

Good for Nothing Bricks

Series | The Lord’s Day In December of 2003 I taught a short series of sermons under the banner “Church Life for Teens.” The initial motivation for that series was that I really wanted students to understand the importance of the biblical ordinances: baptism and the Lord’s Supper. I tagged on a short message concerning church etiquette, hoping to instruct students about customary and polite behavior at church (such bottom line basics like not sleeping in church or getting up, leaving, and returning in the middle of a service).

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One Million Islands Covered

Happy 10 year anniversary and one million MacArthur Study Bibles. As I said before, “If I was stranded on an island and could only have one print resource, this is the one I want.”

For the First Time in 28 Years

I did not go “back to school” yesterday for the first time in 28 years. The past six years I taught one or more high school Bible classes at our Christian school and the previous 22 years I made my way through the typical course of elementary, junior high, high school, (three) colleges, and then graduate school. That is a lot of school; not necessarily a lot of education, but a lot of school, with a fair share of apprehensive and/or unenthusiastic first days to boot.

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Three Minutes More

The TruThseeker is back at his blog and crunched some numbers on the average life expectancy increase over three millennia. I’m using my extra 2 minutes and 53 seconds today to write this.

Genuine Religious Affections are Relentless

Series | For the Love of God This fifth mark is acutely helpful but typically ignored in the attempt to identify gracious, spiritual affections. 5. Genuine religious affections are relentless. In other words, genuine affections are always increasing and developing. They are not stagnant nor are they easily satisfied with their attainments. They do not applaud themselves and pat themselves on the back for how far they’ve come. Truly spiritual affections are not easily satiated.

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Genuine Religious Affections are Nature-Changing

Series | For the Love of God Today we pick up with the next distinguishing mark of genuine religious affections. 4. Genuine religious affections are nature-changing. Though I suppose that this one should be obvious, it apparently is not. When the Bible talks about salvation and conversion and becoming a Christian, it uses language like “born again,” “new creatures,” “taking off the old man and putting on the new man,” “being made partakers of the divine nature” and so on.

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Crankiness Does Not Equal Authenticity

Doug Wilson on why community living is messy, but also why crankiness in the community does not equal authenticity. (Here’s the 1000 words version.)

Out of God's Control

Justin Taylor linked to this article by Dr. Roger Olson who claims that the Calvinist view of the Minneapolis bridge collapse distorts God’s character. Wow. Where to begin? Olson says, What a strange calamity. A modern, seemingly well-engineered bridge in a major metropolitan area collapsed in a moment without any forewarning of danger. Something similar could happen to any of us anytime. Similar things do happen to us or people just like us–innocent bystanders passing through life are suddenly blindsided by some weird tragedy.

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What Do You Expect?

I thought this was interesting…and tiring. The Rev. Warren Carr of Durham, North Carolina, prepared a questionnaire asking his congregation to tell him how much time that they thought he should give to a list of specified tasks. The members of his congregation were shocked to discover that the average work week indicated by their answers was 82 hours. One answer proposed a schedule of 200 hours–32 more than there are in a week.

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