hey and welcome! i (eric) will be your host today. i recently got engaged to, arguably, the most amazing girl in the world. now if you will be so kind, join us on a tour of our world for the next 5 months. please take a stroll down the aisles of our blog and make yourselves at home. i would offer you some coffee or tea, but we're fresh out, although there might be some in your kitchen...(i dunno, i'm just thinkin out loud?) if you will be so kind as to turn your attention toward the center aisle, you'll be able to view the adventures of mine and katie's engagement shenanigans as we do this thing called "wedding planning." while you're at it, come back every wednesday for "wedding wednesdays" by katie, you won't want to miss it! on either side of the center isle you will find informative gadgets to help you get to know us and the things we love (cookies, people, blogs, websites, tugboat racing, etc...). we hope it's as good for you as it is for us. if you have any questions, then leave a comment on any post and "customer service" (i.e. eric) will get back to you as soon as possible! have a nice time!

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Greater Cost

 2 Timothy 3:12-13
"In fact, everyone who wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted, while evil men and impostors will o from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceived."
Acts 14:22
"... We must go through many hardships to enter the kingdom of God."

I feel as if there are two natural questions that must follow from these two scriptures.
1)What do these scriptures mean?
2) How are they applicable to those who are called into the fellowship?
To address the first question, Some of you will say that we are being persecuted(after much thought), and then you'll come up with a few examples about how you've lost a few friends here and there because of Jesus. That is good my friend! That is the very least that should come in the name of Jesus! But is this really "persecution?" 
The dictionary defines persecution in this way.
persecute |ˈpərsəˌkyoōt|
verb [ trans. (often be persecuted)subject (someoneto hostility and ill-treatmentesp. because of their race or political or religious beliefs Jews who had been persecuted by the Nazi regime.

Now unto the second question.I am not really sure how they are applicable. Maybe a call to more urgency? Maybe for us to be more desperate for the Lord Jesus Christ? As I sit here writing this, I look up at a poster in my room  of the movie "V for Vendetta," and it makes me think of what I'm trying to relate in a really radical form. If you haven't seen the movie, then please watch it, and you then might have some sense of what I am discussing.
I leave you with this thought: However one chooses to interpret these scriptures will be what it is, but i trust in the teachers above all teachers to reveal truth to you if you truly seek it.Challenging Question:Are we radical enough?

1 comment:

  1. "Challenging Question: Are we radical enough?"

    This is certainly an excellent question that should really activate those sadly seldom used theological "gears" turning in the minds of many professed believers, and also motivate Christians to tell people about Christ who haven't yet heard the Good News. The only thing I would really advise of this question is to be careful with the usage of the word "radical" and how you use it when talking about religion; we all know the word "radical" when combined with the word "religion" can easily promote unwanted connotations in the mind especially after certain events of this early century. I'm not saying you shouldn't use it, just be careful is all. My answer to your question is simple and yet so very complex at the same time: no we are not.

    To the question you proposed, I ask in return:
    Are we fervently active and supportive enough to the Revolution that is Christ? After all, we are in a sense revolutionaries.

    ReplyDelete