The Vulnerables. Our Heritage Builders!
Attending a recent investment seminar with a group of retirees, I was asked whether I was a skier.
I was astonished that many of my fellow attendees said they were skiers! Then the speaker added, ‘a skier is one who Spends the Kids Inheritance’.
Government policy in Australia is that Pension Funds must be spent and not used as a means of passing on an inheritance.
Up till this year this policy has proved a boon for the travel industry.
Our population is ageing and this has led to the construction of many retirement villages (in the US there are whole gated suburbs which allow only limited access of children at certain times of the year). Even Church services have become filleted by the use of ‘traditional’ and ‘contemporary’ as descriptors.
The poet Coleridge wrote ‘what a melancholy world without children, what an in humane world without the aged’.
Today I want to write about the importance the Bible gives to the place of grandparents as heritage builders. The Bible only uses the term grandparent twice, but speaks often of forebears, fathers’ fathers and children’s children.
In Proverbs 4:3-9, Solomon says, ‘when I was a son with my father David, the only son of my mother, Bathsheba, my father, David, your grandfather, said to me and I pass this onto you’.
We may not value David’s fathering, with the affairs of state and defending his throne he must have been distracted, but Solomon remembers his influence and now passes it onto David’s grandchildren.
My father, your grandfather taught me:
Proverbs 4:5, get wisdom and insight whatever the cost. Prize her highly, make her your priority, v.8. Thus when God invited Solomon to ask for anything this urging of his father drove Solomon’s request for wisdom.
Proverbs 4:6, he told me in almost romantic terms, wisdom is to be loved, never forsaken, embrace her and stay faithful to her.
Proverbs 4:8, wisdom is the source of blessings beyond measure, v.9 she will bestow on you a beautiful crown.
That is what Solomon remembers of his father and passes onto his father’s grandchildren.
In his Tyndale commentary on Proverbs, Derek Kidner writes of the influence of the grandparent, that they demonstrate a love of the best things, transmitted by personal influence, along channels of affection!
Urge on our grandchildren that wisdom, referencing God, is the best foundation for a meaningful life.
I offer these reflections:
The most effective youth workers and counsellors at the Katoomba Youth conventions were a couple who were then in their 60’s. Age is no barrier to effectiveness. From my observation this couple remembered names, listened well, spoke but didn’t dominate the conversation and, as far as I know, never criticised the present in the light of the good old days. They were bright and outgoing.
Filleted services are understandable but unfortunate, the young and old are impoverished by this lack of access to one another. The generations need to mix, how else can we fulfil Psalm 78?
I had an elder who used to say, ‘I’m giving while I’m living, so I’m knowing where it’s going’.
The next generation will inherit wealth eventually, so why not direct it their way while you are alive? Encouraging Bible College gap years, short term mission visits, intensive years in Christian colleges, participation in ministry apprenticeship schemes, could all benefit from grand parental financial support.
PRAY! Regular prayer for grandchildren that they will be born from above and that in whatever vocation they choose they will faithful servants of the Kingdom.
In the first 9 chapters of Proverbs there are 4 direct quotations, the criminal gang in 1:11ff, the tragic son in 5:12ff, the seductive harlot in 7:14ff and here, the only positive words quoted, the words of Grandpa, 4:3-9.
They are well worth communicating by personal influence, along channels of affection.
David Cook.
(Image: St. Helen’s Bishopsgate.)
After the deluge
“The world looks very different, just at the moment, from the way it looked even a year ago. What is more, we know that we are yet to feel the full weight of the consequences of what has happened and our response to it.
The level of government intervention to enable us to survive from moment to moment has been huge, and there is already considerable anxiety about what will be left when that support is removed. What will the world look like in 2021 or 2022 when the pandemic is behind us? How will we survive the crippling debt we have incurred? What jobs will have gone forever? What will our churches look like? Will this new awareness of our vulnerability open a wide door for ministry or provide another reason for hardness of heart?
One thing seems sure, we won’t just be carrying on from where we were before.…”
– Moore College Principal Mark Thompson writes in the Spring 2020 issue of Moore Matters, which has the overall theme of “Building for the future”.
Homesick for Heaven
“When I was thirteen, I started boarding at my school. My family moved across the country, a 6-hour flight and then a 5-hour drive away from me. Our school had day students and boarders, but they mostly socialised separately.
The other boarders had all started together at the beginning of Year 7 and had bonded very closely by the time I turned up, mid-way though a term in Year 8. From the very first days I felt desperately homesick. …”
– Words of encouragement from Jocelyn Loane in The Australian Church Record.
GAFCON Chairman’s September 2020 Letter
“It seems trite and overused to say we are living in ‘unprecedented times.’ But the reality is that we are. These times are still ‘unprecedented.’
But they are not unique. The history of the Church is full of the changes and chances of life and the followers of Jesus continued on with His ministry and His message.
So, in the midst of these times, we press on towards Christ and His purposes for us. We go forward. Always Forward. Everywhere Forward! …”
– Archbishop Foley Beach, Chairman of the GAFCON Primates Council, shares encouragement in this month’s pastoral letter.
Claire Smith interviewed on The Lydia Project
On the latest edition of The Lydia Project podcast, Tori Walker speaks with Claire Smith.
In the 30 minute conversation, Claire shares how she came to Christ.
She also speaks about how important it is for Bible-believing Christians to serve on committees, about the Gospel Coalition Australia, culture wars, and – most encouragingly – how good it is to know Christ.
When nothing will stand still #5: Reflections on Hebrews 12
“Over the last months, Emma shared how she was feeling when life suddenly changed with Covid-19, and her plan to go back to a familiar passage.
Here is the next episode…”
– Emma Newling continues her encouraging reflections on Hebrews 12 at The Australian Church Record.
Expository Preaching on the wane? — David Cook
I studied at Moore Theological College from 1973 to 1975, under the principalship of D.B.Knox.
Those who studied at Moore under Dr Knox always anticipated his Doctrine 1 lectures, held twice a week for the whole of first year.
Dr Knox would usually open the lecture making reference to our text, ‘In understanding be men’, by a former principal of Moore, T. C.Hammond.
These remarks would usually take about 10 minutes and then the rest of the lecture consisted of questions and answers.
Knox would occasionally correct Hammond, who wrote his book on an ocean liner, travelling from Ireland to take up his appointment in Sydney.
Dr Knox would say, ‘the archdeacon may have been seasick at this point’.
What impressed me was that Knox, who rarely corrected Hammond, did so on the basis not of the Anglican doctrinal standard, The 39 Articles, but on the basis of God‘s Word, the Bible.
That was Moore’s enduring legacy to me, through lecture room and chapel service, the Bible was taught and preached as the final authority in all matters of faith and practice.
I have recently been part of a committee discussing what it means to be ‘reformed’.
The 5 Solas have been referred to, but finally, I think we have come to the conclusion that the foundation of Reformed theology and conviction, is that the Bible is God’s breathed out word and is our final court of appeal.
We believe what we believe, because that is what the Bible says.
This was the core of Luther’s argument with the Roman church in the 16th Century.
When called upon to retract his writings, Luther said, ‘Unless I am convinced by the text of the Scriptures or clear reason, for I do not trust in the Pope or the Councils alone…I am bound to the Scriptures I have quoted and my conscience captive to the Word of God. I cannot and will not retract anything…’
It is the influence of the Reformers and men like D.B.Knox, which have led me to seek to have the Scriptures at the centre of my life and preaching.
Calvin referred to the Bible as a pair of spectacles, ‘which dispel the darkness and give us a clear view of God’.
The point of these remarks for preaching is that we preach the way we do because of what we believe about the Bible and how God reveals himself. J.I.Packer said, ‘the text of the Bible is God preaching to us’.
The faithful preacher will be God’s mouthpiece, by explaining, expounding, declaring the Bible.
How foolish to have a word from the mouth of God and to displace it with our own thoughts and inclinations!
Does your preaching show your respect for God, your desire to honour him, by faithfully and engagingly proclaiming the Bible?
Is this consistently true, every time you take the pulpit?
My current screen saver is a quote from the late R.C.Sproul:
‘I think the greatest weakness in the church today is that almost no one believes that God invests his power in the Bible. Everyone is looking for power in a programme, in a methodology, in a technique, in anything and everything but that in which God has placed it, His Word!’
David Cook.
Palliative Care
“When I was a university student, our medical school dedicated just one week of our degree to teaching us about Palliative Care. We were to spend five days in the hospice to learn about caring for people at the end of life.
When we arrived, we were surprised at our task for the week. Apart from some afternoon tutorials on medical matters, we were to spend our time with a patient getting to know their story. More specifically, we were not to study the story of their illness, but the story of their life.
I was randomly allocated a man in his 60s and I honestly don’t even remember what he was dying from. But I remember his story. …”
– Jordan Cox shares encouragement at The Australian Church Record.
Ministering from a distance: Paul’s ministry from prison
“Paul wrote Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians and Philemon from prison. He would doubtless have preferred to be with them in person (Phil 1:8), but as he was kept apart from them he ministered from where God had placed him as best as he could.
We don’t get any sense that Paul felt his life was on hold: he continues to make the most of his daily circumstances (Col 4:3ff), preaching to the palace guards and all those around him (Eph 6:19; Phil 1:13), and sending out messengers with hand-written letters to the churches to encourage them and receive news for his own prayers and encouragement (Eph 6:22; Phil 2:18; Col 4:7-9). And we see clearly that although his relationships with these churches were different, his priorities – for clear gospel teaching and for the church to be built up in maturity in his absence – remained the same. …”
– A very relevant article by Caroline Clark at The Australian Church Record.
What is your heart’s desire?
“We all have them. They may be wishes on a wish list. Or we call them dreams and talk about ‘my dream holiday’ or ‘our dream home’. The poet Longfellow wrote of ‘longings wild and vain’. The Bible speaks in Psalm 37 about ‘the desires of our hearts’.
Some people have clearly defined ambitions. CS Lewis splendidly described the ambition to get inside what he called ‘The Inner Ring’, to be accepted into a particular group, an outsider no longer.
Can you identify your heart’s desires – the things that rank as priorities in your life? …”
– Encouragement from Allan Blanch at The Australian Church Record.
‘Come, let us sing!’ with Rob Smith
From The Pastor’s Heart:
“Rob Smith has been a global leader in evangelical music for three decades. He has a new book out ‘Come, Let us Sing!’ just as singing has been restricted in many churches due to COVID-19.
Rob joins us to talk about some of the principles he’s discovered in a lifetime’s work in Evangelical Music, plus how the current pandemic has caused course corrections. …”
Helpful and encouraging.
– Watch or listen at The Pastor’s Heart.
(Image: Rob Smith at St. Andrew’s Cathedral, courtesy Anglican Media Sydney.)
“We must do better” — Simon Manchester to Sydney Anglicans
“Faithful are the wounds of a friend; profuse are the kisses of an enemy,” says Proverbs 27:6 – or to put it another way, we often benefit more from being rebuked than praised.
The Rev Canon Simon Manchester has delivered a firm rebuke in this month’s Southern Cross and, although he risks upsetting some, he observes that “the stakes couldn’t be bigger”. …
– Sometimes being blunt is very helpful if we are to desire ‘The things that are excellent” (Philippians 1:10). Along with the loving rebuke, there is much that is encouraging in the linked video as well as the article in Southern Cross (page 33).
Photo: EMA, 2016.
An Evening Conversation with J. I. Packer – A 1999 Interview by Mark Dever
In October 1999, Mark Dever interviewed Dr J. I. Packer in an event at Capitol Hill Baptist Church.
The 59 minute video from 9Marks is a very worthwhile use of your time.
The Sins of Old(er) Christians – Especially Pastors
“John Chapman, the gifted evangelist now with the Lord, would often say two things as he moved into his senior years: (i) Getting old is the pits, and (ii) Another year, another specialist.
He was no fan on the ageing process and, as an active man, found the breaking-down of his body frustrating and he refused to ennoble it.
I don’t mean he complained about it. He remained thankful and faithful to the end. Chappo was only doing what Ecclesiastes does in chapter 12 – being honest about the brevity of life and the pain of drawing closer to the end of it. …”
– At The Gospel Coalition Australia, Ray Galea has some sobering encouragement for older Christians, and pastors in particular.
The Big Question
“One of the finest preachers I have heard is Haddon Robinson, who was the Harold J. Ockenga, Distinguished Professor of Preaching at Gordon Cornwell Theological Seminary, in the United States.
Haddon Robinson visited SMBC for two Preachers’ Conferences in 1995 and 1999 and his preaching had a great impact us.
His book on preaching, ‘Biblical Preaching’, continues to be very influential in the world of expository preaching.
The central thesis of the book is that preaching preparation ought to lead the preacher to reduce his text to one big idea, a single sentence which encapsulates the content of the Bible passage. Indeed the Wikipedia entry on Dr Robinson lists his notable ideas as: ‘The big idea, Biblical Preaching’. …”
– At the Expository Preaching Trust, David Cook shares lessons he’s learned in sermon preparation.
(Book link added. Photo: St. Helen’s Bishopsgate.)