A new episode of Untangled is up! This podcast is one you must hear! Author Wayne Jacobsen (He Loves Me, So You Don't Want to Go to Church Anymore, and collaborator on The Shack) joins David and Loren to discuss his fantastic new book, Finding Church. David and Loren agree that this is one of the best books (if not the best) written on the topic of the reality of the church in the world today. This is straight talk from a man who has sought authentic New Testament community for more than fifty years and who has discovered it in the most unlikely places. Now Wayne wants to help you find this incredible bride Jesus is shaping by looking at the church as God sees her and by recognizing her as she takes shape around you. What if the church Jesus is building looks more like wildflowers strewn across an alpine meadow than a walled garden with manicured hedges? Get ready to see church through a new set of eyes!
Please forgive the poor audio quality.
We had a bad Skype connection while recording. It is well worth pushing past it to hear this one!
To order a copy of Finding Church go to http://www.lifestream.org/content/finding-church
Monday, October 20, 2014
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
Free to be Small
There is such a drive in our old nature for fame and recognition. This often creeps into our lives as believers and causes us to view our actions and life in Christ as insignificant unless we're doing big things that are noticed by multitudes of people. Yet, more often than not God meets us and impacts the world around us in the small things of our daily lives that often seem insignificant. Real freedom and joy is found in Him when we're free from the drive to do big things to be noticed. This freedom usually comes with the price of suffering so that we're free from the pride of our old nature and can embrace what Father is doing no matter how small and how little we'll be noticed. In Him, there actually is peace, joy, and rest in that place. This is what David Fredrickson and Loren Rosser discuss in this episode of Untangled.
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
God is Love - A response
NOTE: This post is a response to a blog a friend of mine posted titled, "God is more than just love." You can read his post for yourself here: http://agreaterpassion.blogspot.com/2014/09/god-is-more-than-just-love.html The reason I'm posting this is for two reasons: 1. My response is too long to place on his blog or Facebook. 2. I realized through writing my response I ended up typing out the core of my beliefs. I thought many would be encouraged.
How can God be more than who He is? John, who was closer to Jesus than any of the
apostles wrote, “The one who does not love does not know God,
for
God is love.” (1 John 4:8, emphasis added) John states that this is how God defines
Himself. There is no other attribute in
the Bible by which He is defined. The
Son even makes this perfectly clear to us by laying down His life for us, while
we were yet sinners. The attributes you
named are not separate from His love, rather they are expressions of it. Just as you as a father display your love for
your children in many ways, love (though ours is often imperfect) is the
motive. Even God’s anger and hatred are
motived by love. His anger and hatred
are not directed at people but at that which hurts and destroys them. Just as you as a father would smash a black
widow that built a web in your child’s room.
You’d hate that black widow because of the danger she poses to your
child. There is not a single ounce of hatred
towards your child, only love. If you
saw your child playing with the spider’s web you may yell and yank your child
away, but again, your motive is love.
You
stated that the problem is, “we often project our image
of who God is by using a few verses and making that into a glorification of our
own personal ideals, or even ourselves.” The problem is, if this is being
applied to the belief that God is love there are more than a few verses that
put this on display, there is Jesus Christ.
Jesus said if we’ve seen Him we’ve seen the Father and then He went and
died for a world full of sinners. Paul
even wrote that, “one will hardly die for a righteous man…” Paul refutes the idea that believing that God
is love is a reflection of our own nature and creating a God in our own image
because in and of ourselves we are NOT loving.
This goes against our old nature.
We are an “eye for an eye” people and we naturally like a god like that.
Yet Jesus asked of us to love our enemies.
He asked us to be like Him, who died for His enemies, a reflection of a
God who is love. He actually asked of us
something that is impossible apart from Him, because it is not in our old
nature to love. That’s why this belief
of God being love strikes such a cord (negative and positive) in so many
people. Our human minds can’t comprehend
a God like that. So we like to humanize
Him by separating His love from His expressions of it and make them into separate
attributes. But I venture to say that
those who accuse people who believe God is love is the very definition of who
He is,are picking and choosing verses they like and neglecting the others, are strangely
doing that very thing themselves. Instead of glossing over verses that talk
about the love of God, how about really taking a hard look at Jesus. Why is it the highest command Jesus gave us
was to love God and love one another? He
even said that that’s how they’ll know we’re His followers. Why did Jesus say that by our love for one
another is how they’ll know we’re His followers? He didn’t speak of one other
way the world will see God among us. Why
is that? If God can be seen through all
these other attributes, why is Jesus so hung up on this love thing?
You
stated, “To fully know and share God with others we can’t use His love as the
ultimate trump card over all the other ways He reveals Himself.” That’s odd
being that that’s the way God chooses to reveal Himself and make Himself known. Once again, look at Jesus’ death burial and
resurrection. The preaching of the cross
is the core of the gospel because that is where we see God for who He is, “For
God so loved the world…” and “While we were yet sinners.” Love is how He reveals Himself, always. He
placed His love for all humanity on display in Jesus on that cross. If you’re
preaching anything other than that you’re preaching a different gospel.
You
wrote, “Let’s face it. God can be darn right scary. If we read in the pages of
eternity we see that every human that has encountered the Lord was scared to
death. Yet, that is not exactly the way we want others to see Him. It can at
times be embarrassing that He strikes such fear into people.” That depends on who and which pages of
history we’re talking about. The twelve
disciples, Mary Magdalen, Martha, the Pharisees, and multitudes of others
encountered the Lord every single day and they weren’t scared at all. In fact, the Pharisees were so unafraid they
put Him on a cross. Jesus and the
apostles made it clear that if we’ve seen Him we’ve seen the Father. So perhaps you’re talking about the Old
Testament. Then you’re right. But you have to take into account they were buried
in their sins and had never seen Jesus, who is God revealed to us. I’d also say it’s similar for those living
today who haven’t met Him. In Proverbs
the writer states, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” Yet, John writes, “There is no fear in love
because perfect love casts out fear.” So
if God loves us perfectly (which He does) then there is no fear in Him. So what do we do with these two contradicting
verses? Well, notice the writer of
Proverbs said the fear of the Lord is the BEGINNING of wisdom. Guess what?
It doesn’t end there. It ends
with Jesus, the Alpha and Omega, who the apostle John beheld with His own eyes
before penning the words, “There is no fear in love.” When you see Jesus for who He is fear is removed
because of the enormity of His love and then you find yourself crying out to
God, “Daddy!” True intimacy cannot exist
where there is fear. Where is their more
security than in the love of a Father?
Let’s
not forget the whole point of it all is Father desires a relationship with us. I
don’t know of a single relationship that can truly succeed where love is secondary.
Loren
Rosser
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Distracted by a Cause
A new episode of Untangled is up! There is so much injustice, mudslinging, political corruption, and religious obligation in the world today that we often find ourselves driven by anger, arrogance, or self-righteousness to take up a cause. Though some of these causes may appear to be good, many times they are merely distractions to get us to spend our time, energy, and emotions on something other than abiding in God's love and loving others. It is so easy to fall into the trap of placing our identities in something other than Christ. This is what David and Loren discuss in this podcast.
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
Beautiful Crackpots
A new episode of Untangled is up! We are usually taught by this world to keep up an image of strength even when we are weak. This is how many are trained to minister to others. But interestingly, Paul spoke of glorying in his weaknesses. These things are often skimmed over as we read the Bible as if they're merely nice little poetic sayings or Paul being modest. Yet, the truth is Father truly is glorified in our weaknesses because He loves us right in the middle of them. It is often in our weaknesses that others are touched because there is less of us and more of Him. When we don't live in denial of our struggles we are less prone to become pharisees and are better able to genuinely connect with others.
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Love and Judgement
A new episode of Untangled is up and marks a new beginning as my friend David Fredrickson and I have teamed up to host the podcast together. Did you know that love and judgement for us humans are polar opposites? We weren't created to judge, that place is reserved for God alone. But thanks to partaking of the fruit from the of Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil we thrust ourselves into a position for which we weren't created. We were create to abide in the love of our Father not to be experts on good and evil. The root of that knowledge is actually the desire to live independent of God. We cannot abide in love and judge others at the same time. We either eat of the Tree of Life or The Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. This is what Loren Rosser and David Fredrickson discuss in this podcast.
Just click on the link to go to the podcast.
http://untangled.podomatic.com/entry/2014-08-23T14_50_03-07_00
Just click on the link to go to the podcast.
http://untangled.podomatic.com/entry/2014-08-23T14_50_03-07_00
Monday, August 4, 2014
Three Things
This week's episode of Untangled is up! This week Loren has a heart to heart chat with us. He discusses the three things that are of utmost importance for us as believers and a project he is taking on that will result in some changes to the podcast.
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