Thursday, February 5, 2015

ABU Meeting in January - Speaker Dr. David Hanson

The Transforming Vision: Image - Calling - Culture











The Transforming Vision: a biblical perspective for all of life 


David R Hanson MA FRCS (WYSOCS) 2013 claims copyright over this material. It must not be used without permission.

Session 2: Image, Calling and Culture

Heavenly Father, your beloved Son, Jesus the Messiah, faithful to your calling, revealed you
to us as one who works. You made us to bear your image throughout this amazing cosmos.
Stir our hearts to wonder at your manifold works, to cherish and protect what you have
made and to please you by filling the earth only with what delights you. Bless the work of
our minds and hands, for Jesus’ sake.

Last week I asked: what is “salvation” for? What’s being rescued? why are we here at all?
Maybe you’ve thought more about that. For your eyes only, now – write down in one
sentence what you think we humans are here for. When we’re done, you can rewrite it!

I wonder if you used any of the categories Image, Calling and Culture.

The image of God

Why are we forbidden to make and worship images (Ex: 20)? Because God has already
chosen what physical image represents him and how its worth should be reckoned. Male
and female alike, we bear ruling appointment in the world. Like Caesar’s denarius “image
and superscription” we are the coinage that carries God’s authority, reflecting (mirroring)
God in the world – and the world to God. We make the invisible God visible.

Image comes by appointment, not capacity!
We shouldn’t look for it in rationality or other qualities. Sick or well, black or white, MENSA
members or dementia-victims, humans bear the image of God. The orphan, the neonate
and the paraplegic, crying for food, or clean nappies or to be turned are exercising
creational dominion on God’s behalf. “Inasmuch as you did it for one of these….!”

The image of God:

i) carries God’s care, presence & sovereignty into the world

ii) advances his programme in the world, promotes what he promotes (cultural mandate).

In an un-fallen world, Eden would have expanded globally as the earth was “filled”, not
merely by geometric extension, but culturally too (we’ll come back to cultural mandate)

But then, it’s the image of God that
iii) proclaims the Gospel to “every creature”, represents Christ to creation
iv) advances his programme in the world, promoting what he promotes (great commission).

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Al Wolters points out here that in Creation, Cultural Mandate, Gospel and Great
Commission, God has one message: “Let there be…” and “be thus and so…”

2 Life is Religion

(not that it’s church, or prayer, or even consciously focused on God.) Creation sets not only
God’s image, but everything that exists in relationship with him for better or worse: it’s
“response” / “religion”. (Latin: religare -to attach. e.g. ligate, ligature) That’s not a lifestyle
choice for us oddballs: life itself is religion. We are responsive, religious creatures in prayer,
in total concentration on some surgical procedure, in bird-watching; even in proclaiming
that God does not exist!

3 All of Life is religion!

The primary human tasks were imagined into existence to delight the Creator. “For his
pleasure we exist and were created”. In a sinless world they would occupy us, hour by
glorious hour: our… Food and drink; Friendship, sexuality and procreation; Nurture and
education; Crop growing and stock-breeding; Manufacture and market; Travel, government,
art and music; Science and technology; Recreation and Worship; …even sleep – these
occupations, tasks, callings, are given to add value to the cosmos, to change a “very good”
world into a better!

Callings still fit for purpose:

Sin & salvation don’t displace these primary callings: the “Cultural Mandate”. Culture isn’t
good manners, flower-arranging and opera: it’s every way in which we, male and female,
rule creation: it’s what we value and want our children to inherit.

The foot-hold and leverage for our inventive moulding of creation is God’s cosmic law-order.
We stand there to bring the “new” into being, to correct our failures, to do good works that
bless God and neighbour, to live joyfully and securely, to add value to the creation, and in it
all, to be hands and feet to each other.

The primary tasks create forms, customs and artefacts that survive for generations in
distinct “Cultures”. Thence the treasure that is brought into the New Jerusalem, where Jesus
is heir of all things. But we tend to relegate them to a lower, “natural”, “unspiritual” life.
They aren’t preached about much. They sink to the bottom of that unspoken “hierarchy” of
Christian callings (overseas missionary service at the top). If we only know the secondary
(sin-and-salvation-related), “spiritual”, callings might we Christians finish by contributing
nothing to Christ’s inheritance?

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History takes Time

Creation is “unfolded” or disclosed by culture. From machines to mortgages, Mondrian to
missions, all new things depend on what is given in creation. Even fantasy builds on
experience. We never create as God does but nevertheless, the “new” is the substance of
history. Historians are interested in free human formative activity (so: not the Lisbon
earthquake itself – but what people did in response to it.) We mustn’t resist new-ness out of
conservatism or nostalgia. Creatio prima and secunda equip us for creatio tertia (which is
our “rule over the works of God’s hands.”

Our image-bearing course in history is to be righteously discerned by “listening” to the
creation (not only as it “groans” now (Rom 8) but from the beginning.) God speaks there.
We need restraint in handling earth’s resources and our urge to produce the new should be
led by love for God, the neighbour (the unborn neighbour too) and our cosmos. We can’t
“not do culture or history” but we can make bad history.

5 “Creatures”

includes more than “Nature”: marriage (1Tim.4:3, 4); the state & other authorities
(Rom.13:1, 2) are creatures essential to pursuing the Cultural mandate. Many others
(school, orchestra, business etc.) now emerged. Culture shares creatureliness with nature.
The BCP mentions “these, thy creatures of bread and wine”. Aeroplanes and birds are
creatures. On aeroplanes, see the handout: “Impossible!”

6 Some “communities” caricature what ought to be, but, to exist at all, things are held
by God’s creation norms, either in obedience or rejection – an agricultural enterprise or
university, a Somali pirate crew, covens of witches or investment bankers. A brothel only
makes profit because sex is a good creational given and a gang of thieves holds together
because of a sense of honour. God reveals norms in creation, but also importantly in
prophecy (Scripture) and in Christ.

7 The (Kuyperian) Cultural Mandate in the Old Testament

a) Husbandry – livestock will be ruled (Gen.1:24,26)

b) “Earth” and its creatures are taken in hand (Gen.1:28). “Earth” here obviously means
land + sea + sky = the visible creation that we explore and investigate, because our parents
were told to “Fill and subdue (it); to rule over fish, and birds and every living creature.” The
narrator tells how land, sea and sky came to fill the “earth” and each was populated, the last
not only by birds, but also by sun, moon and stars. Although we’ll next look at c) agriculture,
d) craft and industry and e) civilisation, if our human destiny is to “fill” the visible creation, I

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wonder whether an f) lies beyond this planet – and perhaps only powerfully at the
restitution of all things (Ac.3:21).

c) Agri-(Horti-) culture: God cares about more than humans. “There was no-one to
work the land” (Gen.2:5) so they were created to “care for and keep the Garden”(2:15). The
creation of the human race fulfils the garden’s need and saving God’s creation-project
means that humans too must be saved.

d) Craft and Industry: in the “land of Havilah”, (Gen.2:11-12) was “good gold, aromatic
resin and onyx too”. Human work isn’t just for food and utilities. There’s space for luxury!
This (bracketed) remark (“the gold is good”) presupposes much. Think: prospecting, mining,
smelting, casting, polishing, working into chains, brooches, pins. Think too: distillation of
essential oils and turning of soft stone. Think: trade and transport, barter, monetisation.
With historical development, work increasingly demands differing skills and guilds in which
knowledge is acquired, protected and passed on.

Nehemiah 3:8 records that adjacent sections of the Jerusalem wall were rebuilt by (one of
the) goldsmiths and (one of the) perfumers. Interesting!

e) Civilisation – develops creation socio-culturally. It is a dynamic field of potential for
communal human disclosure, not a static given. Marriages, families, clans, villages, towns
and cities, farm enterprises and craft workshops, musical performance and dance, teaching
organisations etc. are necessary to this disclosure in the florescence of creation. None is
“just there”; all are initiated historically.

Christian reflection on the culture we make or inherit is necessary in the myriad
communities that God’s Kingdom-rule establishes, such as family, school and church
congregation. The Kingdom doesn’t only establish one kind of community. We may learn
from others than Christians in reflecting on the culture we inhabit and build.

That reflection covers: care for what God has made; attention to all the forms of his word;
seeking his approval communally and individually with intelligent Bible reading and prayer
inside a real, energetic, cultural involvement. Living only as church will not please the
Creator of all things.

God has more interests than judgment and salvation. He isn’t bored with his project. So,
beware a two-dimensional, moralistic religion. It makes both God and us boring. Salvation
carries his creation project forward as blessing for all generations and peoples and for all
eternity.

As the people of God move from Eden to Canaan, they will discover (Dt. 8:7 ff.)

“good land, streams, pools, springs; wheat, barley, vines, figs, pomegranates; olive oil,
honey; the rocks are iron and you can dig copper”. While Israel’s existence is born of God’s
purpose to set creation and humankind to rights, it’s a salvation history that includes the
primary tasks. She will have resources for her culture and will produce wealth to match her

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multiplication – only if she “pays attention to (God’s) laws and is careful to follow them.”
(Dt. 7:12)

Israel as God’s people are to: “serve (obey) the Lord and keep (hearken unto) his
commandments” (Heb. – ‘abad; and shamar.) Those two verbs back in Gen. 2:15 relate not
to God but to his kingdom space, Eden: “dress it and keep it” = “serve it and hearken unto
it”. To “care for, dress, till or work” variously translate the Heb. ‘abad – but its primary
meaning is “to serve”. No exploitation there!

Creation talks…

God instructs our culture: “a farmer ploughs for planting…does he keep on breaking up and
harrowing the soil? When he has levelled the surface, doesn’t he sow caraway and scatter
cumin? Doesn’t he plant wheat in its place, barley in its plot and spelt in its field? His God
instructs him and teaches him the right way.” etc. etc. “this also comes from the LORD
almighty, wonderful in counsel and magnificent in wisdom” (Isa. 28:24-29). The “way things
are” (even in a fallen world) reveals God’s law words for our good. It is folly to look into the
Bible for all God’s vital instruction.

and the Spirit gives gifts!

“to Bezalel, Oholiab and all the skilled workers” (Ex.31:2-5), men and women (Ex.35;36)
ordinary skills: teaching ability; craft; design for gold, silver and bronze work; cutting and
setting stones; woodwork. Pentecost shouldn’t let us see the Holy Spirit only in the extraordinary
or even only in believers. The pagan Cyrus was made wise to return Israel to its
land from captivity. Treasure from unbelieving nations will be tribute in the New Jerusalem.

8 The creation “Fiat!” sets up a law-order, of grace!

That manifold specified law-order for creatures says: “be thus and so!” Prophecy and
scripture republish that creation-word – but now (Gordon Spykman) with redemptive
intent. The great commission: “Go into all the world…” supersedes neither the cultural
mandate of Genesis nor the law-words written into creation; it reasserts them effectively
with the Spirit’s accompanying power: “This is how I want you to be” because the “King of
Creation” has come! It isn’t Plan B. It has productivity, health, invention, law, love and
beauty at its heart but recognises that the day for the restitution of all things has not yet
come. It calls all human gifts back into God’s service through our new Adam, Jesus the
Messiah. Jesus is the “Everlasting Father” (Isa.9:6) of a new humanity, the one who sets our
race on its feet again.

9 Law intended for life

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The law-structure as a whole (I emphasised this last week) – not just the Decalogue or O.T. –
is an invitation to whole-hearted, single-minded love for God and service of neighbour. The
greatest commandment and the “one like it” summarise the intent of every law, ordinance,
statute, commandment, decree that God promulgates over his creation – “to bring life”
(Rom. 7:10), gravity, economy, logic & boiling point included. “Your laws endure to this day
for all things serve you.” (Ps. 119: 91.) The word revealed “to Jacob” is part and parcel of the
words by which God rules daily happenings in the cosmos (Ps. 148).

10 Calling and “office”

God orders society by granting “office”: a task or service (and the right to exercise it) in
preserving God’s order, in performing the Sovereign’s will, in nurturing what is administered
in the “fear of the Lord”. Office is delegated sovereignty, exercised by image-bearers in the
“station” or “sphere” where they are placed in creation or kingdom (creation restored).
Office is sphere-related. Lawful authority doesn’t leak into other spheres.

Office may also clothe those who reject Messiah’s gospel and have no “fear of the Lord”.
We all inhabit the one creation which God is restoring and we grow together in that
universal kingdom “until the harvest”. But being “children of the kingdom”, “possessing it”;
“entering” it is no guarantee of wise or fruitful office-bearing.

Office as service

Back to our old friend ‘abad”: “to work …the garden” Gen. 2:15: to “serve …Yahweh”
Josh.24:24. The cognate noun – “obed” Servant, qualifies par excellence Jesus himself,
working because his father works, doing his father’s will, destroying the works of the devil
and proclaiming creation’s renewal. All other office is borrowed from, patterned on, this
Office-bearer. Nothing is too humble to be honoured as office – washing the disciples’ feet
was royal, prophetic and priestly work.

Office as administration

Then again: “shamar”: “to… take care of the garden” Gen. 2:15 to “obey (or hearken to) the
LORD“ Josh. 24:24. Whenever we speak of image-bearing ‘dominion’ or ‘rule’, we should
remember and reflect God’s own solicitude for creatures. Initiative, imagination, even
ambition aren’t excluded in serving the one who grants office in his kingdom but they need
wrapping in loving solicitude.


Saturday, December 6, 2014

Natal 2014 - Classe de Casais

Primeira Igreja Presbiteriana de Itajubá

Como é bom e agradável quando os irmãos convivem em união!
Salmos 133:1

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Reunião Final de 2014 - ABU Itajubá


The people walking in darkness
    have seen a great light;
on those living in the land of deep darkness
    a light has dawned.
Is. 9:2

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Narnia Gardens - It glows with colour and smells like heaven

 - - - - 
It glows with colour and smells like heaven and puts forward at 
every hour of a summer day beauties which man could never have created 
and could not even, on his own resources, have imagined.






Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Children and Grandchildren

Life Swings and (Merry) Go Round


Images































ABU - Meeting - Prof. Polinder Speaking on How to Build Your Identity

Images

To be included

Summary of the Study

Mat 3:13-17, 4:1-11

How to build our identity

The main theme of this study is identity. 
- Who are you? What is your identity? 
- What is the most fundamental thing that can be said about you?
- What is it that gives your life value?
- Is there something in your life of which you say: If I would miss that, then my life would not have value anymore?
I think this is a question that keeps us busy throughout our life. Of course, these questions are very important when we grow up from children to adults. 
And when there are important changes in our life, then these questions are probably more explicit:
- When we get a new job.
- When we get married.
- When we get children. 
- When our children become independent.
- I can imagine they also come when we retire, when our wife or husband dies.
On other moments, these questions may be less explicit, but in the background, this still is what is driving us.

We read Mat 3:13-17.
What does this part say about who Jesus is? What is the most fundamental thing this part says about his identity? Vs 17.
What does this part say about our identity? 
If we are united with Christ, if we are in Christ, then this is also true for us. Vs 17
- 1 Joh 4:9 This is how God showed his love among us: He sent his one and only Son into the world that we might live through him. 
This is how he showed, revealed, proved his love for us. How can God show us more clearly how much he loves us?
- Rom 8: 15,16: For you didn’t receive the spirit of bondage again to fear, but you received the Spirit of adoption, by whom we cry, “Abba! Father!” The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God.
Does this make sufficiently clear that we may be Gods beloved sons and daughters?

I hope it is sufficiently clear that according to the Bible, the most fundamental answer to the question who you are, who I am, is that you, that I am a child of God and that God loves us.

As Lord’s day 1, question 1 of the Heidelberg Catechism says:
What is your only comfort in life and in death?
That I am not my own, but I belong – with body and soul, in life and death – to my faithful Saviour Jesus Christ. 
He has fully paid for all my sins with his precious blood and set me free from the tyranny of the devil.
He also watches over me in such a way that not a hair can fall from my head without the will of my Father in heaven: in fact, all things must work together for my salvation.
Because I belong to Him, Christ, by his Holy Spirit, assures me of eternal life and makes me wholeheartedly willing and ready from now on to live for him.
As we sung before the sermon: “my name is written in his hands, my name is hidden in his heart”.

Now our reaction to this gospel, this good news, may be different. My own reaction is different, depending on my situation.
- Our hearts may be full of joy and peace, and we may be glorifying God. I hope that is the case now.
- However, our hearts may be full of doubt. Is this really true? If God loves me, why does it feel so different, why is my situation so bad? Why is my wife Clarisa ill?
- Or, our hearts may be full of questions. I have heard this message so often, but how does it affect my life, how does it change my life? It is such a different reality than the reality of our daily life.
This confrontation with daily life is also what happens to Jesus after his baptism as Jesus was led by the Spirit into the desert and tempted by the tempter.
I think the way Jesus is tempted is typical for many of our temptations. Therefore, it is important to have a closer look at what is happening. 

I think everyone has a void in his heart, everyone has some form of emptiness in his heart, and everyone tries to fill that emptiness with something valuable. At least I have these voids, and I long to fill them.
I think our natural tendency is to try to fill these voids with what we do, what we have and what other people say about us. In other words, we have a tendency to build our identity on what we do, what we have and what other people say about us. 
The tempter knows that and tempt us to do that. In a way, he did the same with Jesus. He came to Jesus to tempt him.

The first temptation is to fill the emptiness in our heart with what we do, to build our identity on what we do.
- In Mat 4:3, the tempter says to Jesus: If you are the son of God, tell these stones to become bread.
- He is trying to make Jesus doubt who he is: If you are the son of God, then…  
- And then he is tempting him to show who he is based on what he does: If you can change stones into bread, then you are somebody, then you show you are the son of God.
- How can we fill the voids in our hearts with what we do?
o If I get that diploma,  that degree, finish that study, then I am somebody.
o If I make beautiful music, if I can play football like Arjen Robben, if I help people in need, if I am a good teacher, nurse, … then I am somebody.
o For myself: engineer, PhD, associate professor. Not bad, isn’t it? However, I am still not a full professor and if I am honest I have to admit there are moments that that frustrates me terribly.
o Also in a religious way: if I am a pastor, if I preach, if I am an elder, then my life is valuable.

The second temptation is to fill the void in our heart with what people say about us.
- In vs 6,7, the tempter says to Jesus: If you are the son of God, throw yourself down. For it is written: He will command his angels concerning you and they will lift you up in their hands so that you will not strike your foot against a stone.
- Again he is trying to make Jesus doubt who he is: If you are the son of God, then…  
- If Jesus jumps down from the highest place of the temple, and angels come to lift him up in their hands, many people in the temple will see it and worship Him, and he will get  the recognition he needs.
- How can we fill the voids in our hearts with what others say about us?
o Maybe our whole life is completely devoted to fulfilling what others expect of us (our parents, our friends, our bosses, my students).
o If they say you are doing well, you feel great; if they say you are doing bad, you feel terrible.
o This is really an important force in the life of some people. It may be an enormously boost for us if people speak well about us. But it can also be a curse: there are also people who commit suicide because of what others say about them. 
o Again, this can also be done in a religious way: I may build my identity on the fact that others say I am a good Christian, I have a great faith, I am faithful, my bible study is great.

The third temptation is to fill the voids in our heart with what we have.
- vs 8,9: The devil took Him to a very high mountain and showed him all the kingdoms of the world and their splendour and said: All this, I will give you if you bow down and worship me.
- If Jesus bows down and worships the tempter, he would get all the kingdoms of the earth. However, without suffering, without dying on the cross.
- How we can try to fill the voids in our hearts with what we have?
o If I have a healthy and beautiful body, then I am valuable.
o If I have such a house, such a car, such an I-phone, these gadgets, then I am satisfied.
o If I have power as a professor, as a director, as a minister, as an elder in church, then I feel important.
o If I have a good romantic relation, if this or that man becomes my partner, then I am happy.
o Some people long so much for love that they even try to fill the emptiness in their heart with sex without love, or with virtual sex, with pornography. 
Some people bring enormous sacrifices for their idols, for example their carrier:
- They make long hours,
- They sacrifice their family,
- They lose their friends.
And that is logical: if there is something that must give your life value, then you go for it.

So, the devil tempts us to build the value of our life on what we do, what we have, and what others say about us. And if we do so, we have a very instable life. One day we feel good because what we do, what we have, what others say about us, develops in a positive way. 
The next day we feel depressed because these things develop in a negative way. Do you recognise this? Or am I the only one?

Just to be clear: most of the things I mentioned above are perfectly fine. You may go for a relation, a study, a carrier, a family.
However, if these things become more important for us than God, if these things become more important for us than what God says about us, if the value of our life depends on these things, then these things become idols. 

How do we deal with this?

Let us first look at Jesus. How did Jesus stand the test?
- First, he cited the Word of God, and that is very important.
- However, where did He find the force to do so? 
- He knew who he was. He built His identity on what his Father said about him. 
o He did not need to change stones into bread to be the son of God, because He already was the son of God. That is what God had just said: This is my Son whom I love, with Him I am well pleased.
o He did not need to bow down before Satan to be give all power in heaven and on earth. After his suffering, death and resurrection, all power in heaven and on earth would be given to him.
o He did not need to jump down from the highest place of the temple to be caught by angels and seen by the people so that they would worship him. The time will come that He will come on the clouds, that every eye will see Him, that every knee will bow down before him, that every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. 
- For Him, the temptation was to achieve all this without going the way of suffering and death.

And what about us? How do we stand our tests?
- First, by using the word of God, just like Jesus did. This shows how important it is to know the scriptures.
- However, knowing the Word of God is not enough. Satan likes it very much if we know the word of God, but believe something else in our heart. He likes it if we say we are children of God by grace, but in our hearts, we believe this is only true if we are good enough, if we keep his commandments in a sufficient way, if we testify enough of our faith, if we help others good enough. If in fact, we build our identity on what we do, what we have, what others say about us. And that is never enough.
- Therefore, it is so necessary to really know who we are not only with our mind, but with all our heart, deep inside: Gods beloved sons and daughters.
o Our value, our identity does not depend on what we do. We do not need to do anything to become children of God, we get it. For free. Out of sheer grace. Out of love. Our value has been given by what God says: that we are His children.
o Our value, our identity does not depend on what we have. If we have God as our Father, if we have Jesus as our Saviour and our King, if we have the Holy Spirit as the divine inhabitant of our hearts, what do we need more? We have the comfort that is not only valid in life, but also in death.
o Our value, our identity does not depend on what others say about us. What God says is determining. You remember what God says about you if you are in Christ? This is my son, my daughter whom I love, with him/her I am well pleased.
I am convinced this is the one and only thing that can really fill the void in our heart, that we hear God saying: You are my son, my daughter whom I love, with you I am well pleased.

Do you also find it so difficult to build your life, your identity, your value on what God says alone? To claim this reality, to live a life based on this reality?
Why would it be so difficult not only to hear this message with our ears and mind, but also to let it sink into the bottom of our hearts? 

How could we learn to do this better?

Mat 26:26 is from the part where Jesus held the Lord’s Supper for the first time. That verse says: “While they were eating, Jesus took the bread, blessed it, broke it and gave it to his disciples.”
What Jesus said about the bread, was also true for Him: He was taken, He was blessed, He was broken, and He was given.
- He was taken to be the Messiah, the Saviour. Maybe it would be better to say He was chosen to be the Messiah.
- He was blessed. We just read one of His special blessings, where the Father said: “This is my Son whom I love, with Him I am well pleased.”
- He was broken when He suffered and especially when He died on the cross.
- He is given. He gave Himself into be broken, and now He is given to us, and we receive that we are born again, that our sins are forgiven, that we are adopted as children of God, we receive eternal life.
That is what Jesus made visible for us in the Lord’s supper.

However, if we are in Christ, if we are united with Him, if we belong to Him, we also share in some way that we are taken, blessed, broken and given.
- We have been taken, we have been chosen, at least to hear the gospel today, to hear this good news, to know His love. Maybe you have been chosen to hear that message from when you were very young, when you were born in a Christian family. Maybe you have been chosen to hear this message for the first time today. 
- We are blessed, because we hear this message: You are my son, my daughter whom I love, with you I am well pleased. Jesus regularly took time to pray on a lonely place, to be with His Father. We should follow that example. 
o If our life is completely full with business and stress, 
o if our life is completely full with social media and virtual reality, 
o if our life is completely full with building our identity on what we do, what we have and what others say about us, 
o how can we then hear the soft voice of the Holy Spirit testifying that we are children of God?
- However, we are also broken. Following Jesus implies we have to take up our cross and follow Him. Many people think that when they are blessed by God, everything goes well with them. And in a way that is true. Paul says (Rom 8:28): We know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him. All things. However, that does not mean that everything goes as we wish. On the long run, it will be for our good, but it may be different from what we wish, it may be difficult to see that. Jesus was tempted, we will be tempted in some way. Jesus was persecuted, we will be persecuted in some way. Jesus carried his cross, we will carry ours.
- And we are given to be a blessing for the people around us. We are called not to live for ourselves, but to give our life as a daily offering of worship to the Servant King. So let us learn how to serve, let us learn how to prefer each other’s needs.
Maybe it would be a good idea to ask ourselves every day how we have been chosen, blessed, broken and given.

You can find a very nice illustration of this sermon in the film Chariots of Fire, a film partly based on a real story of two athletes in the Olympic games of 1924. One of them is Harold Abrahams from England. Just before he has to run the 100 m, he says something like: “In a few minutes, I will have 10 seconds to show my life is worth living.” He won the 100 m. He clearly built his identity on what he did.
The other is Eric Liddell from Scotland. In spite of a lot of pressure, he refused to run the 100 m because that race was on Sunday, and he set Sundays apart for the Lord. A few days later, he won the 400 m. In one of the scenes in the film, his sister asks him if he does not train too much, if running is not too important for him. His answer is: “God made me fast. When I run, I can feel his pleasure.” One year after the games, he went to China as a missionary. He clearly built his identity on Gods pleasure. He was chosen to know Gods love. He was blessed with a fast body. He was broken and given. He sacrificed his athletic career to become a missionary in China. In the second world war, he ended up in a Japanese camp. He was offered to leave the camp in a prisoner exchange between England and Japan, but he gave his place to a pregnant woman. In 1945, he died in that Japanese camp at the age of just 43. He was broken and given.

I very much like that sentence: “God made me fast. When I run, I can feel his pleasure.” I would like to rephrase that as: “God made me an engineering professor. When I teach engineering, I can feel his pleasure.”

You know, in February this year, I visited a conference for Christian man. At the end of the conference, every man got a small wooden cross as a reminder. I decided to take that cross to university and I fixed it to the top left corner of my computer screen, to remind myself that my life does not depend on what happens on that computer screen, but that my life has been determined by what has happened on the cross some 2000 years ago. I believe this is reality. However, I do not know how much it really helps. After a few days, I got used to the cross. Nevertheless, it reminds me.

During the last months, a number of things happened that stimulated my frustration about not still not being a full professor. I won’t tell you the details. Therefore, I have to tell this story again and again to myself. I am not telling you what I practice, I am telling you what I need most myself.

Maybe, you feel tired of building their identity on what you do, what you have, and what others say about you, just like myself. Therefore I want to close with a word of Jesus from Mat 11: 28-30:
Come to me all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 
For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.



Now our reaction to this gospel, this good news, may be different. My own reaction is different, depending on my situation.
- Our hearts may be full of joy and peace, and we may be glorifying God. I hope that is the case now.
- However, our hearts may be full of doubt. Is this really true? If God loves me, why does it feel so different, why is my situation so bad? Why is my wife Clarisa ill?
- Or, our hearts may be full of questions. I have heard this message so often, but how does it affect my life, how does it change my life? It is such a different reality than the reality of our daily life.
Do you recognize the different reactions to the gospel?

So, the devil tempts us to build the value of our life on what we do, what we have, and what others say about us. And if we do so, we have a very instable life. One day we feel good because what we do, what we have, what others say about us, develops in a positive way. 
The next day we feel depressed because these things develop in a negative way. Do you recognise this? Or am I the only one?

Do you also find it so difficult to build your life, your identity, your value on what God says alone? To claim this reality, to live a life based on this reality?

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Like Children

"Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.

























Flowers of Narnia - July 17 / 2022

 “Look at the lilies and how they grow. They don’t work or make their clothing, yet Solomon in all his glory was not dressed as beautifully ...