Saturday, February 27, 2010

Food for Thought: 645 Article of the Week

Crouching Tiger, True Repentance Scott Clark (sourced from HERE)

Th
ere is an argument that Tiger’s sexual immorality is private and none of our business. Fine. His very public apology, however, gives us an opportunity to think about the nature of repentance and faith. During his apology Tiger made reference to his wandering from his childhood faith, Buddhism. He apologized to all those people, including his fans, whom he offended and whom he disappointed. He pledged to do better, to return to the laws of Buddhism, including, one imagines, its requirement for various forms of self-denial. There is one, however, to whom Tiger did not apologize and there is a law to which he did not pledge obedience.That law is God’s law: “Cursed is everyone who does not continue to do everything which is written in the book of the law (Gal 3:10; Deut 27:26). The law of God requires “perfect and personal obedience” (WCF 7.2). The one to whom Tiger did not apologize, of course, is the thrice-holy God. However much Tiger may fear losing his wife, his family, or his endorsements, he has much more to fear from God who is a “consuming fire” (Deut 4:24).

Scripture does not know anything about apologies to God. Scripture only knows about perfect righteousness as the way to acceptance with God. As has been said often enough, God does not grade on a curve. Indeed, he does not.

Consider the wholly horizontal orientation of Tiger’s apology and the rather more, if you will, vertical orientation of David’s confession of sin in Ps 32. Discovered for the adulterer (and murderer) he was, David did not hold a press conference. Convicted by God’s Spirit of his sin against God (and Bathsheba and Uriah) he turned his face to God his judge. “Blessed is the man against whom Yahweh counts no iniquity” (Ps 32:2). The God-wardness of David’s repentance is perhaps even more pointed in Ps 51: “Have mercy upon me, O God…blot out my transgressions” (Ps 51:1). “Against you only have I sinned” (Ps 51:4). In these moments David understood that sin is lawlessness (1 John 3:4) and “the day you eat thereof you shall surely die” (Gen 2:17). “The wages of sin is death” (Rom 6:23).

True repentance, as distinct from mere apologies, begins with a recognition of reality, of who and what God is and of who and what we are. It begins with the knowledge of the greatness of our sin and misery. True repentance reckons with the law as the perfect expression of God’s perfect and unyielding righteousness. True repentance drives one to Christ, the only righteous man, the only man who ever actually kept the law, and true faith trusts in that one righteous man and in his “one act” of righteousness (Rom 5:18; i.e., his whole, perfect obedience) for his elect.

True repentance, i.e., genuine sorrow for sin against God and heartfelt desire to turn away from it, is born of true faith. Unbelievers don’t repent. Believers do. They know the greatness of their sin and misery. Tiger does not yet appear to know that. He seems to think that if he just focuses a little harder, is more disciplined, if he denies himself the pleasures of this world (his language), he can get everything back on track. Perhaps he can—as far as we can see. At the last day, however, it will not matter that Tiger recovered his public image, that he built more schools, that he regained the trust of his family and followers. At the last day it will only matter if he has satisfied the righteousness of God and I guarantee you that, as remarkable as Tiger is, he cannot do it. No sinner can.

The great good news for Tiger and for you is that Jesus has already done it and everyone who trusts in him and in his obedience for sinners is reckoned as if he himself had done all that Jesus did. God accepted Jesus’ righteousness. Jesus was vindicated by his resurrection (1 Tim 3:16). As certainly as Jesus was raised from the dead, so certainly will God accept Tiger and you and whoever turns to Christ in true faith, i.e., a certain knowledge and a hearty trust that Jesus obeyed and died “for me.”

From that true faith, a believer begins daily to die to his own desires and to live to Christ. He continues to sin for the rest of his life but now we know what sin is and we know what grace is. We know that in God’s free acceptance of sinners for Christ’s sake there is power and new life and real hope for real change; not perfection in this life but free acceptance with God (grace) and mercy and the work of the Spirit in our hearts, minds, and wills. By his grace the same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead unites us to Christ, through faith, and is at work in us making us slowly, imperceptibly like Jesus.

Tiger pledged to do better. That won’t be good enough. Pray that Tiger and everyone else who heard his apology realizes the difference between “doing better” and doing “everything written in the book of the law” and that Christians understand the difference between an apology and true repentance.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Launch T10 Dowload Talks

Put these URL's into your browser
(then you can SAVE as to your computer)


Talk 1 (Friday Night)

www.nac.asn.au/old645/miketalk1.mp3

Talk 2 (Saturday Morning)
www.nac.asn.au/old645/miketalk2.mp3

Talk 3 (Saturday Night)
www.nac.asn.au/old645/miketalk3.mp3

Talk 4 (Sunday Morning)
www.nac.asn.au/old645/miketalk4.mp3

Thursday, February 25, 2010

RevWrites - Feb 25

A new Mission Big Picture is evolving at NAC.

At this time in history, God seems to be doing an amazing thing in Africa. (In fact, he seems to be doing it across the Global South, including South America and India.) Africa alone covers over 30 million sq km. It’s almost a quarter of the surface area of all the countries in the world!

Millions of Africans are coming to know Christ. Evangelists are planting new churches all the time. In some Anglican dioceses, bishops are opening numerous church buildings every week.

The Africans are good at planting churches. They don’t seem to need any help with this. But they do need help. When God does something this spectacular it stretches human resources. The new African churches struggle to provide ministers for all the new congregations. They are being forced to appoint ministers who have very little biblical knowledge.

And that’s where we come in! We have resources that we can use them to help.

Moore College and CMS and African Enterprise and Sydney Diocese and various individual churches like NAC are all involved together to focus on Africa.

NAC has a new Mission Big Picture. NAC has always supported mission. In the past, 10% of our general, non-specified collections went to mission. This has changed over the years but so has our involvement with mission.

The Parish Mission Team and your Congregational Mission Teams will be bringing you more and more up-to-date with the various aspects of our mission. I want to talk about just one.

You are all aware that the Mays and the Sinclairs are going to Africa on a short-term mission in just a few weeks time. It would be easy to see this as an isolated event. But it’s not. It’s part of the Big Picture. These short-term missions will become more frequent. And will cost us more, of course.

Why? Why do we want to be involved in mission in this new and additional way? Because the African church has a longer-term plan to evangelise the world, including Australia. Those of you who went to CMS Summer School might have heard Dennis Tongoi, Director of CMS Africa, tell of the growth in Africa. The population there is growing whereas in the first world the population is shrinking. Along with population growth, general growth and economic growth are slowing in the first world but growing in Africa.

The African church is planning for gospel growth worldwide. If we could see ahead ten or twenty years, we might see that we’re at the beginning of world-wide evangelism. That’s their plan!

Only God sees that far ahead with any certainty. But from what we already can see we’d be crazy to miss out on being involved at the beginning. So our plan for the next 10-20 years is to help train African pastors as much as we can.

Neil

Wrestling with Righteousness

Some good thoughts on the feedback cards from Sunday. In particular, people are wrestling with the whole issue of righteousness. Yes we shouldn't be self righteous but is it okay to be confident of our righteousness in Jesus? How do we live confidently in Jesus without falling over into pride or self righteousness? Great questions.

Some thoughts;
1. When we talk about 'righteousness' it can sound a little too churchie and abstract from our lives. But righteousness is the big eternal issue. When the Bible speaks of our righteousness it's talking about our standing before God. Are we forgiven, right, okay, blameless before God? So it's the big issue.

2. The Bible is very clear that we can never be right with God on our own terms (see Romans 1:16-3:26 or Philippians 3:1ff for the apostle Paul's powerful explanation of this). We only receive righteousness in Jesus. Jesus died for our sins, in our place so that when we trust completely and only in Jesus for our salvation we are right before God. We need to be very clear about this because of our human tendency to promote ourselves and think we can bargain with God. The parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector in Luke 18 that we looked at on Sunday is very powerful in destroying our pride before God. So to partially answer the questions above we only have righteousness and confidence in Jesus.

3. But what does that look like in the Christian life? Can we have confidence and be proud of our achievements? Of course. God not only wants us to be saved he wants us to know and be certain that we're saved. Christianity is not about keeping you well behaved by making you feel vulnerable and scared. Being a Christian means you are holy and blameless in God's sight now (see Ephesians 1:1-14). Our problem is that we so often turn that into pride, apathy and SELF (rather than Jesus) righteousness. So Luke 18 destroys our pride and slide into self confidence so that our hope and trust would be in Jesus.

4. So how can someone who is feeling they are 'going well' identify those subtly areas where they are self righteous or pride? The big and obvious one is to devote yourself to reading, meditating on and praying through the Bible (both alone and in community). I've found that when i lose sight of the glory and beauty of God i start to slip into pride and self reliance. But as i enjoy and delight in God for all his beauty, power, mercy, and grace then i put aside my small ambitions and agendas to serve him. As i said this is kind of obvious but so easy to forget. Martin Luther said that the Christian life is always one of repentance. We continue to examine our hearts under the light of God's word - repenting, trusting, growing. We keep on looking to the cross of Jesus for our salvation, our hope, our forgiveness. It's only when we look there and see our saviour and Lord that we have true, real, eternal hope and confidence.

Trusting only in Jesus,

James


Wednesday, February 24, 2010

645 News (Feb 24)

645 this SUNDAY
Jesus is now 30km from Jerusalem. This week we see the heart of Jesus. Are you ready for that? It will blow your mind. Read Luke 18:31-19:10 in preparation. Arrive early, catch up with old friends + new friends.

Launch 2010
How good was Launch T10!! If you still owe $$ for accommodation or books then fix that up this week.
Watch Saturday Night Dance off
Watch + Pray for T10 Resolutions
Launch Talks (coming Sunday)

645 Rosters
Do you want to serve at 645 on a Sunday Night? Help us help you to serve - click HERE and give this to one of the leaders at 645. NEW Rosters Uploaded MONDAY. Old ones are HERE

645 Article of the Week
This week we posted an article from Sydney Anglicans on how sinful Australia is. Read, ponder and feel free to post your thoughts as comments to the post. Read this week's article HERE.

CONNECT GROUPS
Are you in a Connect Group? Join one today. Talk to your friends or a leader at 645 and join a community group of young adults who want to meet Jesus.


Have you missed these BLOGS?
RevWrites on Reading
Volunteer Survey for 645
Prayer info for the Berthons
Prayer info for the Prydes

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Food for Thought: 645 Article of the Week

Australia: world’s most depraved nation
Jeremy Halcrow
(Sourced HERE)

February 16th, 2010 A recent BBC magazine investigation has supposedly shown that Australia is the most sinful nation on earth topping a global tally of the seven deadly sins. The more sensational media had a field day with the idea that Aussies are ‘still’ born to be bad, just like their convict ancestors

As the Herald Sun put it: “AUSTRALIA is the most sinful nation on earth, as befits a country founded as a penal colony.”

The analysis claimed that Americans are struggling with gluttony, South Africans the most wrathful, while Japanese and Koreans have the biggest problem with lust. Australians were found to be the most envious. In truth the methodology of the survey was somewhat dubious. The tally was put together by comparing national statistics for plastic surgery (pride), theft (envy), violent crime (wrath), number of annual holidays (sloth), annual salary (greed), money spent on fast food (gluttony) and porn (lust). Apart from the ‘pride’ and ‘lust’ and ‘wrath’ measures, the connection between the ‘sin’ and the metric is fairly questionable. Nevertheless

I’m not going to let my compatriots off the hook that easily. The BBC’s Focus Magazine awarded Australians the dubious prize of being “the most sinful nation on earth” for scoring highly in every one of the seven categories. Taken as a whole these measures do tells us something troubling about Australian society. Like Americans (who were ranked second) we are very rich nation increasingly spending that wealth on ourselves and our own pleasures (plastic surgery, holidays, fast food, porn).

The words of Ecclesiastes 2 seem most apt at this point. But I also wonder if the prophet Isaiah was alive today he’d say something like this? "Woe to those who make unjust laws, to those who issue oppressive decrees, to deprive the poor of their rights"

This brings me to The Four Corners documentary, that looked at the Federal Government policies that are set to force the closure of the Kingsdene Special School run by Anglicare (Diocese of Sydney). In my mind the journalist presented a powerful case that we are not doing enough as a community to help these most vulnerable of families. The documentary was a study in how to tell a compelling news narrative without sensationalism. If anything Four Corners has understated the difficulties facing families caring for children with severe and multiple disabilities. This is clear when you compare with Marie Claire treatment of the same issue which begins with the story of Anita Cain who was forced to ‘dump’ her child on DOCS.

Like many Australians, Anita Cain adjusted her clocks on April 1, 2006, to reflect the end of another Sydney summer. In Anita’s case, though, this was a task that had to be completed with military precision: her 11-year-old son, Niall, was born with a range of disabilities that included obsessive-compulsive behaviour - and timekeeping was one of his obsessions. After touring the house, the single mother of one was convinced she’d put back every timepiece, but had forgotten to adjust the spare watch Niall kept on his bedside table. When he noticed the next day, he lost control.

Infuriated, he clambered onto the stove top, sending glasses and mugs in all directions and, crying and screaming, began tearing at the kitchen clock. “He pulled the clock off the wall because it said a different time to his watch,” recalls Anita, who could only look on helplessly. “There was glass everywhere.” As she stood in the wreckage of her kitchen, her son’s inconsolable wails filling the room, something in her snapped, and she came to a realisation that filled her with shame and guilt: she could no longer share a home with her son.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

RevWrites- Feb 21

Reading. How much do you read? Some people read little. Some only read the TV guide. Others read more. I heard this week about one of our JGs Junior Leaders who’s read all the Harry Potter books twelve times! I think we see both ends of the spectrum here.

But reading is important. It’s important because God speaks. He speaks words and some of those words have been written down for us. He expects his people to read.

I’m not just talking about reading the Bible. I want to talk about reading in general. If you read little can I encourage you to read more?

Books are divided into two types – fiction and non-fiction. You can tell from the names of the two types that fiction is primary. If you don’t read any fiction let me encourage you. Reading fiction is very powerful. It lets you into another world (or another person’s head) without actually paying the airfare to get there.

Reading widely develops not only our imagination but also our appreciation of people in all their diversity and complexity. This helps us relate to other people. And God built us for relationships.

Some of us need encouragement to read fiction. I didn’t start reading fiction until I was in my 30s. And even then only because friends encouraged me. Regularly reading fiction is good for us.

Some people read only fiction. Of course, reading fiction is better than not reading at all. But much non-fiction is very helpful. Many books have been written to help us in our relationship with God and his people. Any of the ministry staff will be able to help you choose helpful books to read.

But what if you hardly read much at all? This is not so much a problem for young people but older people. A large proportion of older people hardly read at all.

If you’re in this group then starting to read more is a bit like starting to exercise. Start small! In the non-fiction department might I suggest starting with The Briefing.

The Briefing is a monthly magazine produced by Matthias Media. There’s letters and articles about all sort of helpful Christian stuff and a Bible study guide at the end. I read it monthly because it stirs me up about things. You can check it out and subscribe at http://www.matthiasmedia.com.au/

Can I encourage you to read? I might be wrong, but it seems common sense that people who hardly read at all will find Bible reading much harder and maybe even comprehending the Bible much harder.

Reading more widely will do the good things I suggested above but also build better Bible reading skills. God has spoken. It’s a great idea to read what he has said and to read it well.

Neil

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

645 News (Feb 17)

645 this SUNDAY
Jesus is close to Jerusalem. He is teaching all who will listen what the identity of a disciple looks like. Read Luke 18:9-30 in preparation. Arrive early, catch up with old friends + new friends.

645 Rosters
Lots of people serve the body in many ways at 645. Click HERE to see what is happening in Feb and March. If you would like to serve, Click HERE and give this to one of the leaders at 645.

Haiti Support
This crisis continues. Please check out these sites to get the latest info and how to help.
Compassion Info HERE
Churches Helping Churches HERE

645 Article of the Week
This week we posted an article by Tim Chester on being on about mission as your culture. Read, ponder and feel free to post your thoughts as comments to the post. Read this week's article HERE.

CONNECT GROUPS
FINAL groups are online. Click HERE





Have you missed these BLOGS?
Volunteer Survey for 645
SAFE MINISTRY info for leaders
Prayer info for the Berthons
Prayer info for the Prydes



Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Prayer & praise from the Berthons

1. School RE: The school wants Lyndy to run RE for the Tuesday morning assemblies.

2. Bible and Prayer: The Ngukurr ministers wanted to help church members with English and so asked Peter to teach it. Peter did a weeks intensive of bilingual education in reading the Bible and writing prayers from the Bible.

3. Rev gets Tuberculosis: Rev Carol Robertson has been diagnosed with a small area of tuberculosis in her lungs. This means two weeks in Katherine hospital.

4. Adult Baptism/Confirmation: Pray for Marjorie Hall, preparing a number of women by teaching the foundations of the faith.

5.Ministry to men: Men continue to show interest in
Christianity but are not currently effectively being discipled. They shy away from reading the Bible and don't readily join in discussions.

6. Roderick: His enthusiasm continues (despite troubles at home). Peter and Roderick have read the Bible, prayed, had brekky and worked on manual jobs around church together.

7. The Government Intervention: This has enabled better consultation with locals about the future of Ngukurr through us having a locally placed government business manager. We will be getting a new shop and a new aged care centre (with early childhood) in Ngukurr this year! We are also promised a many new houses. There will be a lot of building and outsiders here this year.

8. Reducing Smoking: 85% of Ngukurr adults smoke, causing/compounding numerous health problems. James Cook Uni is seeking to address this. Most church members smoke and many are wanting to give up.

9. Aaron: School of the Air is going well. Aaron was enjoying the pool with the kids in the afternoons but his dishydrotic eczema has flared up recently and prevented most outside play.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Connect Groups FINAL

Below is the FINAL lists for Connect Groups for 2010.
If you would like to change, have a problem with days or ... then let us know either at 645 on a Sunday, through your friends or email ed@nac.asn.au.


Changes are in ORANGE. Hall/Gardner Connect Group is NOW TUESDAY



645 Rosters (Feb/March - v1)

Here are the rosters for Feb/March. Please contact Ed or Troy if there are any questions or changes.


Saturday, February 13, 2010

Food for Thought: 645 Article of the Week

Missional as Identity (Tim Chester)
(Sourced from HERE)

Mission as identity

For many people mission has become an event. We have guest services. Evangelistic courses. Street preaching. Youth programmes. There’s nothing wrong with these things. But mission is more than a slot into our schedules. It is an identity and a lifestyle. Mission is about living all of life, ordinary life, with gospel intentionality.

Missional communities
We are called to be missional communities – not lone evangelists. The life of the covenant community is to be a light to the nations. ‘By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.’ (John 13:35) Our love for one another reveals our gospel identity. The world will know that Jesus is the Son of God sent by God to be Saviour of the world through the community life of believers (John 17:20-23). This does not primarily mean inviting people to meetings. It is about shared life into which other people are welcomed.

Scattered communities of light
Imagine a globe in darkness with one point of light. That was Israel in the Old Testament, one point of light in a dark world, drawing the nations to God. And New Testament believers are still be communities of light, drawing people to God. We still draw people in towards the centre. But the centre is no longer one geographic location in Palestine, but a hundred, thousand communities of light scattered across the globe. We are not be like a lighthouse, occasionally sending a beam of light across the city. We are to be communities of light and hope and love in a dark and broken world at street level, on the street corner.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Pray for the Prydes


It was great last year to hear from Joshua and Naomi Pryde - the couple doing ministry to the Hippie community.

It's great to persist in prayer for our brothers and sisters as we all seek to overflow the love of Jesus into people's lives. To know better how to pray, download their latest newsletter here.

Directions to Launch


View Larger Map

Driving directions to WEC Camp Centre
(02) 4973 1402
107 km – about 1 hour 25 mins
Thomas St
Northmead NSW 2152
1.Head east on Thomas St towards Windsor Rd
0.3 km
2.Turn left at Windsor Rd
2.4 km
3.Turn right to merge onto M2 Mwy
4.0 km
4.Slight left at Cumberland Hwy exit
Toll road
0.9 km
5.Slight left to merge onto Cumberland Hwy
7.9 km
6.Slight right at Sydney Newcastle Fwy
86.4 km
7.Take the exit towards Mandalong Rd
0.4 km
8.Turn left at Mandalong Rd
0.1 km
9.Sharp right to stay on Mandalong Rd
Go through 1 roundabout
1.6 km
10.At the roundabout, take the 2nd exit onto Dora St
1.3 km
11.Turn left at Bridge St
0.4 km
12.Turn right at Terrigal St
18 m
13.Take the 1st left to stay on Terrigal St
0.8 km
14.Turn right at Ettalong Rd
0.1 km
15.Take the 1st left on to Russell Rd
Destination will be on the left
0.3 km
WEC Camp Centre
Nentoura Rd
Morisset NSW 2264

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

645 News (Feb 10)

645 this SUNDAY
After Launch we will be getting straight back into Luke. As Jesus takes us on his journey to Jerusalem, we and his disciples are being challenged to have our lives completely shaped by him. Read Luke 17:20-18:10. Arrive early, catch up with old friends + new friends.

Haiti Support
Last Sunday we prayed for Haiti. Now it is time to respond both prayerfully and financially.
Compassion Info HERE
Churches Helping Churches HERE

645 Article of the Week
This week we posted an article by Tim Keller on being changing our culture. Read, ponder and feel free to post your thoughts as comments to the post. Read this week's article HERE.

Launch 2010
THIS FRIDAY!!
Wednesday NIGHT there will be a post on how to get to Launch T10.
Meet the Speaker (Part 1 + Part 2)
Watch "Theme night ideas"
Read "Working hard to make a living"
Read "The things we do for work"


CONNECT GROUPS
Draft groups are online (and being updated each day). Click HERE for the post on Groups.



Have you missed these BLOGS?
RevWrites (Feb 7)
Volunteer Survey for 645
Aust.Day Conference Review
SAFE MINISTRY info for leaders



Tuesday, February 9, 2010

645 Volunteer Survey

If you missed Connect+ on Tuesday 9th Feb, then you missed an opportunity to share with us how and where you would like to serve in 2010. Attached is a survey you can complete and get back to us by the end of Launch 2010. This survey is for ADULT members of 645 only (SH volunteer to serve in SH this year).

Please tick the areas you would like to serve. Also note down any other ideas you have. All are welcome.
DOWNLOAD survey HERE

Monday, February 8, 2010

DRAFT Connect Groups (updated - TUES 3pm)

BEFORE YOU CHECK THE GROUPS

1) The leaders have tried hard to do two things
- listen to your thoughts on which group you would like
- try and form communities that welcome new people and our year 13's

2) If you are UNHAPPY or CANNOT do the day
- email ed@nac.asn.au as soon as you can
- we will do our best to solve the issue
- These groups do not go live till Launch


3) If you are not on a list

We have not forgotten you. Most probably we have not got any information from you on which group you would like to connect into. Please email ed@nac.asn.au or talk to us at Launch and we will find you a group.

4) Please pray for all the 645 Connect Groups.

Click the picture to make BIGGER
(those in yellow have moved - talk to us if your worried)





Saturday, February 6, 2010

Food for Thought: 645 Article of the Week

Work and Cultural Renewal

I am often asked: “Should Christians be involved in shaping culture?” My answer is that we can’t not be involved in shaping culture. To illustrate this, I offer a very sad example. In the years leading up to the American Civil War many southerners resented the interference of the abolitionists, who were calling on Christians to stamp out the sin of slavery. In response, some churches began to assert that it was not the church’s (nor Christians’) job to try to ‘change culture’ but only to preach the gospel and see souls saved. The tragic irony was that these churches were shaping culture. Their very insistence that Christians should not be changing culture meant that those churches were supporting the social status quo. They were defacto endorsing the cultural arrangements of the Old South. (For more on this chapter in American history, see Mark Noll, The Civil War as a Theological Crisis.)

This is an extreme example, but it makes the point that when Christians work in the world, they will either assimilate into their culture and support the status quo or they will be agents of change. This is especially true in the area of work. Every culture works on the basis of a ‘map’ of what is considered most important. If God and his grace are not at the center of a culture, then other things will be substituted as ultimate values. So every vocational field is distorted by idolatry.

Christian medical professionals will soon see that some practices make money for them but don’t add value to patients’ lives. Christians in marketing and business will discern accepted patterns of communication that distort reality or which play to and stir up the worst aspects of the human heart. Christians in business will often see among their colleagues’ behavior that which seeks short-term financial profit at the expense the company’s long-term health, or practices that put financial profit ahead the good of employees, customers, or others in the community. Christians in the arts live and work in a culture in which self-expression is an end in itself. And in most vocational fields, believers face work-worlds in which ruthless, competitive behavior is the norm.

There are two opposite mistakes that a Christian can make in addressing the idols of their vocational field. On the one hand they can seal off their faith from their work, laboring according to the same values and practices that everyone else uses. Or they may loudly and clumsily declare their Christian faith to their co-workers, often without showing any grace and wisdom in the way they relate to people on the job.

At Redeemer (Presbytarian in NY), especially through the Center for Faith and Work, we seek to help believers think out the implications of the gospel for art, business, government, media, entertainment, scholarship. We teach that excellence in work is a crucial means to gain credibility for our faith. If our work is shoddy, our verbal witness only leads listeners to despise our beliefs. If Christians live in major cultural centers and simply do their work in an excellent but distinctive manner it will ultimately produce a different kind of culture than the one in which we live now.

But I like the term ‘cultural renewal’ better than ‘culture shaping’ or ‘culture changing/transforming.’ The most powerful way to show people the truth of Christianity is to serve the common good. The monks in the Middle Ages moved out through pagan Europe, inventing and establishing academies, universities, and hospitals. They transformed local economies and cared for the weak through these new institutions. They didn’t set out to ‘get control’ of a pagan culture. They let the gospel change how they did their work and that meant they worked for others rather than for themselves. Christians today should be aiming for the same thing.

As Roman society was collapsing, St Augustine wrote The City of God to remind believers that in the world there are always two ‘cities’, two alternate ‘kingdoms.’ One is a human society based on selfishness and gaining power. God’s kingdom is the human society based on giving up power in order to serve. Christians live in both kingdoms, and although that is the reason for much conflict and tension, it also is our hope and assurance. The kingdom of God is the permanent reality, while the kingdom of this world will eventually fade away.

Tim Keller (Jan 2010)
Sourced HERE