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— Redeemed and Reformed - Instagram
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“Don’t go back to something God has rescued you from.”
— Redeemed and Reformed - Instagram
And when God opens this next door, you're going to understand why the enemy fought you so hard.
Our vocation among the elites in First World societies
I was at my 25th college reunion this past weekend, and my collar got a lot of attention. You’re a priest! That’s a surprise. How’d that happen? As you do when you have to talk about yourself over and over, you package your story so that your life sounds like it has a clean narrative. I decided to become a priest in Boston, even though I’m not from Boston, because I had wanted to be a university chaplain, that actually I felt being one a was a part of my vocation to the priesthood, and that the Boston area has a lot of universities, so it seemed a fit. I said that a lot. But with a few classmates who had grown up to be more interesting people (at least to me) than they were when we were all in college, some conversations went deeper.
One evangelical Christian who’s a professor at a med school in California wondered, Isn’t it hard to spread the Gospel not just at a place like MIT, but in Boston after the scandals and all that? And I said, yes, but that’s why it’s worth it. Just like it’s worth it to spread the Gospel in a place like LA. From there the conversation broadened to discuss how to do Christian apostolate today.
The Church already knows how to evangelize pagan cultures which have not yet heard the Gospel, and primitive cultures, where the missionaries and clergy are among the most educated people in society (and therefore are impressive in worldly terms). In the U.S., the Church knows how to take in immigrants and help them make progress here, both spiritually and as productive citizens. We’ve done these things before, there’s an existing playbook, and so that sort of apostolate just involves making a few tweaks to adjust to the new immigrant groups, and from there it’s just a matter of organization and will.
What we’ve not figured out how to do is evangelize a post-Christian or post-Catholic culture, a culture that believes it has heard the Gospel already, that is bored by Christianity and has moved beyond it, a modern and intellectual place like France or Boston. And unless we crack that nut, unless we can re-evangelize the First World, all our successes in the Third World will be rolled back as over time people from those cultures progress and they too come to think that they’re too educated and sophisticated to believe in Christianity.
So that’s one way to look at our vocation today. God has given us the opportunity to be in a post-Christian society, to be at elite places like modern universities, so that we can run experiments on our friends and colleagues, testing different approaches to discover the best ways to help them encounter the Gospel with fresh eyes. We have to have as a part of our prayers, that all the people around us, including those who seem farthest away or most hardened, may come to know what Christianity really is; and that at least some of them may come to share our faith. That’s the task of Christians who find themselves with access to modernity’s elites.
“What a fool I am, O God, to chase after other things when you are enough.”
— Redeemed and Reformed.
“May I never forget the good things He has done for me.”
— Psalm 103:2
“We grow. It hurts at first.”
— Sylvia Plath, from The Collected Poems; “Witch Burning,” c. October 1961 (via violentwavesofemotion)
And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.
Philippians 4:7
“When you have tasted the beauty of God and the approval of God in Christ, the addiction to human approval is broken, and you are free.”
— John Piper
“Abraham waited decades until he saw God’s promises come. Joseph waited over a decade. Sometimes, Many years will pass until God opens doors. Right now he is preparing you to be able to walk through it.”
— Redeemed and Reformed
“You’re exhausted in the faith because you’re looking at you. The more you look at yourself and the less you look at God, the more you get frustrated at yourself.”
— Matt Chandler
“He heard you. Just be patient.”
—
2 days ago, God gave me something I had been praying for for 8 years. He hears. He answers. God’s timing, not mine.
I can relate to this
“Let the first words out of your mouth while still on your pillow be a cry to God: ‘I need you again today.’”
—
John Piper
“’ My son, give me your heart, and let your eyes observe my ways.”
— Proverbs 23:26
Tim Keller on Polygamy and Primogeniture in the Book of Genesis
“Many years ago, when I first started reading the Book of Genesis, it was very upsetting to me. Here are all these spiritual heroes—Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph—and look at how they treat women. They engage in polygamy, and they buy and sell their wives. It was awful to read their stories at times. But then I read Robert Alter’s The Art of Biblical Narrative. Alter is a Jewish scholar at Berkeley whose expertise is ancient Jewish literature. In his book he says there are two institutions present in the Book of Genesis that were universal in ancient cultures: polygamy and primogeniture. Polygamy said a husband could have multiple wives, and primogeniture said the oldest son got everything—all the power, all the money. In other words, the oldest son basically ruled over everyone else in the family. Alter points out that when you read the Book of Genesis, you’ll see two things. First of all, in every generation polygamy wreaks havoc. Having multiple wives is an absolute disaster—socially, culturally, spiritually, emotionally, psychologically, and relationally. Second, when it comes to primogeniture, in every generation God favors the younger son over the older. He favors Abel, not Cain; Isaac, not Ishmael; Jacob, not Esau. Alter says that you begin to realize what the Book of Genesis is doing—it is subverting, not supporting, those ancient institutions at every turn.
When I read Alter’s book, I then reread the Book of Genesis and loved it. And then it hit me: What if when I was younger, I had abandoned my trust in the Bible because of these accounts in Genesis? What if I had drop-kicked the Bible and the Christian faith, missing out on a personal relationship with Christ—all because I couldn’t understand the behavior of the patriarchs? The lesson is simple: Be patient with the text. Consider the possibility that it might not be teaching what you think it’s teaching.”
“Faith is like an empty, open hand stretched out towards God, with nothing to offer and everything to receive.”
— John Calvin
If anyone says, “I love God,” and hates his brother, he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother whom he has seen cannot love God whom he has not seen.
1 John 4:20