- Johann Christoph Arnold
This blog compiles some notes and observations from one average guy's journey of life, faith and thought, along with some harvests from my reading (both on-line and in print). Learning to follow Jesus is a journey; come join me on the never-ending adventure!
Showing posts with label Reconciliation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reconciliation. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 10, 2016
The Door To Happiness
- Johann Christoph Arnold
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
Sunday, March 9, 2014
The Ultimate Musician
"God is the ultimate musician. His music transforms your life. The notes of redemption rearrange your heart and restore your life. His songs of forgiveness, grace, reconciliation, truth, hope, sovereignty, and love give you back your humanity and restore your identity. "
— Paul David Tripp, A Quest for More (Greensboro, NC: New Growth Press, 2007), 145
HT: Of First Importance
HT: Of First Importance
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Love This Passage
2 Corinthians 5:17-21 - So much truth packed into one litle paragraph!
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Reconciled to Reconcile
“Thinking about gospel reconciliation in concentric circles, we are reconciled first to God in Christ, then to one another in covenant community, and third to what God is doing in the renewal of all creation. To put it another way, think of the gospel as a stone landing in a pond. The life, death, and resurrection of Jesus are the cause of many ripples; they are the epicenter of God’s work in the world. The first ripple is our personal reconciliation to God. The second ripple establishes the body of Christ, as we are reconciled to each other. The third ripple is the missional posture of the church as we mobilize to proclaim the fullness of reconciliation in the gospel. In essence, we are reconciled to reconcile.”
— Matt Chandler The Explicit Gospel
(Wheaton, Ill.: Crossway Books, 2012), 144
Hat Tip: Of First Importance
I'm currently reading this book. Hope to have more to say about it later this week.
Sunday, March 4, 2012
A Church Demonstrates Congegational Repentance and Reconciliation
Loved this story of a Baptist church in Memphis practicing reconciliation and healing after a near church split. The excerpts below are from an article in the Memphis Commercial Appeal newspaper.
"Since 2006, there have been several heartbreaking situations that have occurred in our church family that resulted in broken relationships, broken trust, divisions within our church family and a damaged witness in our community," Dr. Charles Fowler, the church's senior pastor, wrote to the congregation last month....Pastor Charles Fowler led his church through a season of repentance for division and then a worship service of confession and forgiveness.
....Church leaders and members had been battling each other for control for years. One pastor resigned in 2006, citing "the protection of my wife and children" after a long and bitter dispute over church governance. Three years later, another pastor resigned after an angry dispute over worship styles and other issues.
On Sunday evening, Jan. 29, in Germantown, Fowler called his flock together to confess, forgive and repent corporately in a special service he called "Grace Applied."
"We have prayed so long for this service," Fowler began as hundreds of past, present and future church members and leaders filled the seats of the worship center. "Your Holy Spirit has prepared the hearts of many, many people who have a desire to be here tonight."
Fowler had prepared for the service by writing a declaration of confession and forgiveness for the congregation to read aloud together. He also set the stage with three chairs, three basins of water and three white towels.
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Salvation Top 20
When God saves you, He…
HT: Jude St.John, Already Not YetPraise God for the assurance that comes from these great truths.
- Regenerates you, moving you from spiritual death to life. (John 3:1-8)
- Redeems you, buying you out of slavery to sin. (1 Peter 1:18-19)
- Justifies you, declaring you innocent in His sight. (Romans 5:1-9)
- Sanctifies you, setting you apart as holy. (1 Cor 1:2,30)
- Forgives you of all your sins. (Ephesians 1:7)
- Cleanses you, removing from you the stain of sin. (Hebrews 9:14)
- Reconciles you to Himself. (2 Corinthians 5:17-19)
- Seals you with His Spirit as a guarantee of your future hope. (Ephesians 1:13)
- Indwells you, sending the Holy Spirit to live in you. (Romans 8:9)
- Adopts you, making you His child. (Romans 8:14-17)
- Baptizes you into Christ’s body, the Church. (1 Corinthians 12:3)
- Illuminates your mind so you can understand the Scriptures. (2 Corinthians 4:3-4)
- Makes you a new creation. (2 Corinthians 5:17)
- Reveals you as one of His elect. (Ephesians 1:4, Romans 8:29-30)
- Grants you eternal life. (John 11:25-27, 1 John 5:11-13)
- Names you an heir with Christ. (Romans 8:17)
- Grants you an inheritance. (1 Peter 1:3-4)
- Declares you a saint. (Romans 1:7, Colossians 1:2)
- Grants you new citizenship, making your home heaven rather than this world. (Philippians 3:20)
- Makes you a slave of Christ, a slave with the greatest, most glorious Master that any could ask for. (1 Corinthians 7:22-23)
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Do You Know "The -ations"?
As we approach Good Friday, I wonder how many of us know and can list the -ations of The Cross:
From: The Gospel-Driven Church
No, not the stations. The -ations.
Mediation -- There is a gulf between us and God, held in tension by his justified wrath owed to us for our sin. At the cross, the sinless Christ does the work of mediation both necessary and ordinarily impossible.
Condemnation -- The mediator must accept the place of the guilty in order to exchange his innocence. Therefore he goes to the cross willingly, because it is the foreordained place of condemnation where we all belong. He becomes the substitute condemned and takes on the condemnation.
Propitiation -- A blood debt is owed, legally speaking, because without the shedding of blood there can be no forgiveness of sins. But we cannot make this payment because we have no currency with which to do so. We are morally bankrupt, every last one of us. So at the cross, Christ makes this payment with the riches of himself, supplying his life to take the debt upon himself and thereby satisfying the law's demands. God's wrath is thereby appeased.
Imputation -- By propitiating the debt of sin, he takes it off of the condemned onto himself as he becomes the condemned on the cross, but in doing that, he conveys his innocence to those actually guilty. He who knew no sin became sin that we might become the righteousness of God. His righteousness is imputed to us; this means that we are counted righteous despite our sin.
Expiation -- But Jesus doesn't stop there. With his life given sacrificially on the cross, he doesn't just take on our debt, he eradicates it completely. He takes it upon himself like the scapegoat to carry our sins into the void. Another way to say this is that Jesus' work on the cross doesn't just reckon us righteous, it actually makes us righteous.
Sanctification -- An ongoing work of the Spirit, to be sure, but thanks to Christ's expiating work on the cross, we are also declared sanctified on the cross, which is to say, cleansed by his blood. (1 Corinthians 6:11)
Justification -- Nearly all of Christ's crosswork put together merits what we receive through faith: right standing before God. Because of the cross, we for whom there was no justification are now justified.
Reconciliation -- And since we are justified before God, we are reconciled to him. The gulf is bridged, the wrath appeased, the debt canceled and cast into the void, the soul cleansed. Christ's wide-open arms at the cross reveal to us the means of the Father embracing his once-lost children. Through the cross, Christ reconciles us to God. (Colossians 1:20)
Nations -- Who is Christ's crosswork for, exactly? (1 John 2:2)
From: The Gospel-Driven Church
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