Friday, July 23, 2010

Obsession

This week we read the "Profile of the Obsessed" chapter.  Full of conviction and challenges to live for Christ alone, this is my favorite chapter yet.

Here are some of the main points:

People who are obsessed with Jesus...

" give freely and openly, without censure.  Obsessed people love those who hate them and who can never love them back."

"aren't consumed with their personal safety and comfort above all else.  Obsessed people care more about loving God's kingdom coming to this earth than their own lives being shielded from pain or distress."

"live lives that connect them with the poor in some way or another. Obsessed people believe that Jesus talked about money and the poor so often because it was really important to Him."

"are more concerned with obeying God than doing what is expected or fulfilling the status quo.  A person who is obsessed with Jesus will do things that don't always make sense in terms of success or wealth on this earth."

"know that the sin of pride is always a battle. Obsessed people know that you can never be 'humble enough,' and so they seek to make themselves less known and Christ more known."

"Do not consider service a burden.  Obsessed people take joy in loving God by loving His people."

"are known as givers, not takers. Obsessed people genuinely think that others matter as much as they do, and they are particularly aware of those who are poor around the world."

"think about heaven frequently. Obsessed people orient their lives around eternity; they are not fixed only on what is here in front of them."

"are characterized by a committed, settled, passionate love for God, above and before every other thing and every other being."

"are raw with God; they do not attempt to mask the ugliness of their sins or their failures.  Obsessed people don't put it on for God; He is their safe place, where they can be at peace."

"have an intimate relationship with Him.  They are nourished by God's Word throughout the day because they know that forty minutes on Sunday is not enough to sustain them for a whole week, especially when they will encounter so many distractions and alternative messages."
 
"are more concerned with their character than comfort.  Obsessed people know that true joy doesn't depend on circumstances or environment; it is a gift that must be chosen and cultivated, a gift that ultimately comes from God."

"know that the best thing they can do is be faithful to their Savior in every aspect of life, continually saying 'Thank You!' to God.  An obsessed person knows there can never be intimacy if he is always trying to pay God back or work hard enough to be worthy.  He revels in his role as child and friend of God."


WOW, what a list!  


Saturday, July 17, 2010

What will you do?

Francis Chan has been challenging us with the question of what will we do for God? What will we sacrifice, how can we downsize, how will we help the least of these? These have been tough questions we've been grappling with. The scriptures are very clear about what God expects of us, the question is what are we willing to give up for God? What are we holding onto tightly that we're not willing to loosen hold of?

What will you do?

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Real Love

I posted this on my blog, but thought it relates well to what we've been reading in Francis Chan's book.

Real Love

When we became your bride,
we vowed eternal love,
that we'd stay by your side,
eyes fixed on you above.

How quickly those eyes strayed!
Our first love was replaced,
by idols man has made
and we felt no disgrace.

Believing we're still yours,
never bearing our cross,
wanting to live secure,
not sharing with the lost.

Thinking or fate is sealed,
(we said the sinners prayer)
how does it make you feel
when our hearts are elsewhere?

Looking in a mirror
we foget what we saw.
Obeying what we heard
shows love is not a fraud.

We're to give all we own
and rejoice in our pain.
Living for you alone;
heaven will be our gain.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Desiring Heaven for His gifts, or for God?

Interesting quotes that I found that relate to the one we were talking about in chapter 6 by Piper:
The quote basically addresses whether we truly desire Christ or just His gifts.
"The critical question for our generation--and for every generation is this: If you could have heaven, with no sickness, and with all the friends you ever had on earth, and all the foods you ever liked, and all the leisure activities you ever enjoyed, and all the natural beauties you ever saw, all the physical pleasures you ever tasted, and no human conflict or any natural disasters, could you be satisfied with heaven, if Christ was not there?"

The following quotes I saw tonight in Piper's book "When I Don't Desire God"

"There have been times when I think we do not desire heaven;
but more often I find myself wondering whether, in our heart
of hearts, we have ever desired anything else. . . . It is the secret
signature of each soul, the incommunicable and unappeasable
want, the thing we desired before we met our wives or made our
friends or chose our work, and which we shall still desire on our
deathbeds, when the mind no longer knows wife or friend or
work. . . . All your life an unattainable ecstasy has hovered just
beyond the grasp of your consciousness. The day is coming
when you will wake to find, beyond all hope, that you have
attained it."
C . S . L E W I S
The Problem of Pain

"Now there was only one hope, the sovereign grace of God. God
would have to transform my heart to do what a heart cannot make itself
do, namely, want what it ought to want. Only God can make the
depraved heart desire God. Once when Jesus’ disciples wondered about
the salvation of a man who desired money more than God, he said to
them, “With man it is impossible, but not with God. For all things are
possible with God” (Mark 10:27). Pursuing what we want is possible.
It is easy. It is a pleasant kind of freedom. But the only freedom that lasts
is pursuing what we want when we want what we ought. And it is devastating
to discover we don’t, and we can’t." John Piper