worship

I owe the idea for this blogpost to a friend of mine, Dr. Craig Thompson. Craig is the Pastor at Malvern Hill Baptist Church, blogs, and hosts The Ordinary Christian Podcast. Craig hosted Adam Mabry on a recent episode, and they conversed about Mabry’s book, The Art of Rest.

The conversation turned on the need for the Christian to find healthy rhythms of rest and worship in the midst of our busy, achievement-centered culture. Sometimes it seems as if we associate busyness with spirituality. For a Biblical example look at Martha in Luke 10:48-52.

This blogpost is not from an expert. Sure, I can take a nap, but I’m too often guilty of not resting as God has prescribed. I’m not going to get in the details of what we can or cannot do on our day of rest. That’s the kind of legalism that the Pharisees cared about. But God did give us the Sabbath Day for our own spiritual health (Mark 2:27). We need the rest and worship that God commands.

Here are some of the things God is teaching me as I’ve reflected on rest and worship.

  • God models rest for us. In Genesis, God rested on the seventh day of creation. God wasn’t tired. He was modeling a principle that the masterpiece of his creation needed. Jesus himself modeled rest (Mark 5:38). That God modeled rest indicates the importance of setting aside one day a week for rest and worship.
  • God commands us to build rhythms of rest and worship into our schedule. All the way back in the 10 commandments, God commanded his people to observe the Sabbath Day by refraining from regular work and focusing on God in worship. Of course, New Testament believers worship on Sunday, and we are not required to observe the Sabbath Day in a legalistic fashion. Yet we are still obligated to build rhythms of rest and worship into our lives.
  • God invites us to bring our burdens to him. Jesus offered spiritual rest to those who labored (Matthew 11:28-30). God doesn’t need our efforts and energy. Rather, he invites us to trust him and blesses us by taking our burdens. We need to learn to depend on him.

I don’t have this figured out. There are some more things I know God wants to teach me about the specifics of how to rest and worship well. (We’ll explore some more of these next week in part 2). But there is one truth that God has imprinted in my mind that I hope will encourage you.

One of the primary reasons we should observe a rhythm of rest and worship is because God has everything under control.

When I don’t rest well at night, when I am stressed, or when I can’t turn my brain off, it is often because I’m trying to be in control. I’m trying to fix that situation. I’m trying to work out that issue. I’m trying to make something happen. God has certainly called us to be effective and active. And sometimes that’s what we’re doing. But we need to remember that God has everything under control. When we remember this most important truth, we can lay our head down at night in peace. When we remember this most important truth, we can obey God on that one day a week set aside for worship and rest.

Tonight, before you go to sleep (or when you are awake because you can’t sleep), remember that God has everything under control.

This week, when you are worshiping and resting on that special day, remember that God has everything under control.

God is teaching me to observe a rhythm of rest and worship because I need the regular practice of trusting him. How about you?

Photo by Nathan Dumlao on Unsplash

Regarding salvation in Christ, Do we choose God? or Does God choose us? Yes.

Let me clarify my purpose in this blogpost. I’m writing this post to help my congregation and readers better understand their salvation in Biblical terms, and to revel in the wonder and glory of a holy God who would willingly send his Son to die in order to save us.

Here’s a key verse in this conversation:

“Before I formed you in the womb I knew you,
and before you were born I consecrated you;
I appointed you a prophet to the nations.”

Jeremiah 1:5

Before we write off this verse as specific to Jeremiah, note how Paul describes salvation in rather similar terminology for all of us as followers of Jesus.

29 For those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, in order that he might be the firstborn among many brothers. 30 And those whom he predestined he also called, and those whom he called he also justified, and those whom he justified he also glorified.

Romans 8:29-30

Several phrases correlate: knew and foreknew, consecrated and predestined/conformed, and appointed/called. The implications are striking.

As a pastor and professor (but mainly as a Christian), it is my duty to be Biblical. God defines the terms and gets to set the parameters for our theology. I recognize there will be theological dissension on some points. But where Scripture is clear, I must be clear. So what do we do with these verses that highlight God’s foreknowledge, election, and predestination related to our salvation? We believe them.

But what about verses that highlight whoever would come to Christ can be saved? (see John 3:16 or Romans 10:13). We believe them as well.

The real question is whether or not these verses and others we could draw from indicate inconsistency in Scripture regarding salvation. In other words, are these passages in tension? Another way of asking the question would be: “How do you reconcile God’s sovereignty with man’s responsibility?” Charles Spurgeon, 19th century Baptist pastor answered: “You never have to reconcile friends.” The point is that biblically, God’s sovereignty and our responsibility are not in tension.

God predestines and elects. If he did not do so, none would be saved. That is clear from Jeremiah 1:5, Romans 8:29-30, and other passages as well. Predestination and election reflect God’s sovereignty. They remind us that God takes the initiative in our salvation. Furthermore, God sent Jesus to die on the cross (his initiative). God sent the Holy Spirit to convict us of sin and draw us to himself (his initiative). The Bible declares clearly that our salvation derives first and foremost from God.

God invites and redeems. Salvation is an offer from God to sinners. This offer comes through the Holy Spirit and the communicated gospel.

13 For “everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” 14 How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone preaching? 15 And how are they to preach unless they are sent? As it is written, “How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!”

Romans 10:13 -15

What is our part in salvation then? Our part in salvation is that we come as as sinners. We bring nothing good that deserves salvation. Rather, we bring ourselves in need of salvation. To receive salvation is to repent of our sin and believe on the Lord Jesus (Acts 2:38; Romans 10:9-10). Salvation then is a gift to be received, not a wage to be earned (Romans 6:23).

These biblical reminders about our salvation encourage several responses from us as believers:

  • We should be grateful that God initiated our salvation. God’s sovereign work in our salvation encourages us to praise and thank him. It leads us to worship.
  • We should be Biblical in our understanding of salvation. Through the centuries, there has been significant tension regarding the order of salvation, divine sovereignty, human responsibility, Pelagianism, semi-Pelagianism, Arminianism, and Calvinism. This blogpost will not solve those tensions. (We may explore some of those tensions in future posts). However, if we will affirm what the Bible affirms, we will certainly not be found in error regarding our theology of salvation.
  • We should communicate the gospel regularly. The only way someone will receive salvation is to hear and respond to the gospel of Christ. Believer, it is your responsibility and mine to share the good news of salvation regularly.

Photo by James Coleman on Unsplash