Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Chapter 15 - Bible Reading

Chapter 15 referenced 7 scripture passages to heighten our understanding of the imperative of reading and knowing the Bible:

John 8:31-32
Hebrews 4:12-13
1 Peter 1:13-25
Deuteronomy 30:11-14
John 5:31-47
2 Peter 1:3-21
2 Timothy 3:10-17

The hymn for Chapter 15 was "Lamp of Our Feet” by Bernard D. Barton. (If you are not familiar with the song, just Google the hymn name and you will get multiple sources to read and/or hear it, as well as its history.)

The meditation selections included excerpts from the writings of William Johnston, Edward J. Farrell, Gretchen Gaebelein Hull, Frederick Buechner, Ira Progoff, Martin E. Marty, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, George Cornell, and “A Compend of Wesley’s Theology” edited by Robert W. Burtner and Robert E. Chiles. (Googling their names may give you some insight into their backgrounds and experiences, if that's of any interest to you.)

Some of the interesting quotes from the meditations included:

· “…the force and power in the word of God is so great that it remains the support and energy of the Church, the strength of faith for her children, the food of the soul, the pure and perennial source of spiritual life.”
· “It is Scripture, the Word of God that is the reality-depth of our prayer, for ‘we speak to Him when we pray: we hear Him when we read the divine sayings.’ …What would happen to us if we would more deeply believe the truth – God speaks! God speaks to me! …God is speaking directly to me in Scripture.”
· “Maintain at all costs a daily time of Scripture reading and prayer.”
· “What I began to see was that the Bible is not essentially, as I had always more or less supposed, a book of ethical principles, of moral exhortations, of cautionary tales about exemplary people, of uplifting thoughts… I saw it instead as a great, tattered compendium of writings, the underlying and unifying purpose of all of which is to show how God works through the Jacobs and Jabboks of history to make himself known to the world and to draw the world back to himself. …Until you can read the story of Adam and Eve, of Abraham and Sarah, of David and Bathsheba, as your own story, you have not really understood it.”
· “…God’s word whether written or spoken may be compared to a mirror. Spiritually, the eyes of your soul are your reason, your consciousness is your spiritual face. …if you have a dirty spot on your physical face your eyes cannot see that spot … without a mirror … ; so it is spiritually … that without reading or hearing God’s word it is not possible for a soul blinded by habitual sin to see the foul spot upon his consciousness.”
· “The Bible has to be plundered and searched for what has to do with one’s promise.”
· “…this word which sets us at once to work and obedience, is the rock on which to build our house.”
· “The Bible is the record of those divine breakthroughs into human history. ‘God’s search for man,’ it is described, rather than being our search for God. …Unlike most religious literature, it is not chiefly a collection of noble sayings, but a drumroll of events, people, struggles, great and terrible, of frailty, doubts and heroism, of the ultimate might of right. …It is ‘salvation history,’…a vivid…account of God’s persistent, unrelenting quest for us and our stumbling, often faithless response.”
· “I want to know one thing – the way to heaven: how to land safe on that happy shore. God Himself has condescended to teach the way… . He hath written it down in a book. O give me that book! At any price, give me the book of God! …here is knowledge enough for me.”
· “We are to hear. All of us. That is what the whole Bible is calling out. ‘Hear, O Israel!’ But hear what? …The Bible is hundreds upon hundreds of voices all calling at once out of the past and clamoring for our attention… . And somewhere in the midst of them all one particular voice speaks out that is unlike any other voice… . Come, the voice says. Unto me. All ye. Every last one.”

What do any of these quotes (or any of the meditations in Chapter 15 not quoted) mean to you? Please post your responses to the blog site.

John

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Chapter 14 - Study

Chapter 14 used the following 7 scripture passages to sharpen our appreciation for the value of Bible and devotional study:

Philippians 4:8-9
1 Timothy 4:6-16
Deuteronomy 17:18-20
2 Peter 1:3-8
Psalm 119:97-104
Luke 8:16-18
Proverbs 2:1-22

The hymn for Chapter 14 was "How Blest Are They Who Hear God’s Word” by Johan Nordahl Brun. (If you are not familiar with the song, just Google the hymn name and you will get multiple sources to read and/or hear it, as well as its history.)

The meditation selections included excerpts from the writings of Anthony Bloom, Evelyn Underhill, Susan Annette Muto, Richard J. Foster, Norman Cousins, Paul Tournier, Thomas Merton, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Henri J. Nouwen, and Philip S. Watson’s compilation of “The Message of the Wesleys”. (Googling their names may give you some insight into their backgrounds and experiences, if that's of any interest to you.)

Some of the interesting quotes from the meditations included:
· “So there is need for some sort of prayer which is not spontaneous but which is truly rooted in conviction. …It is a question of learning by heart enough meaningful passages, from the psalms or from the prayers of the saints. …one day when you are so completely low, so profoundly desperate that you cannot call out of your soul any spontaneous expression, any spontaneous wording, you will discover that these words come up and offer themselves to you as a gift of God, as a gift of the Church, as a gift of holiness, helping our simple lack of strength.”
· “The question of the proper feeding of our own devotional life must of course include the rightful use of spiritual reading. And with spiritual reading we may include formal or informal meditation upon Scripture or religious truth: the brooding consideration, the savouring – as it were the chewing of the cud – in which we digest that which we have absorbed, and apply it to our own needs.”
· “Formative reading thus involves a shift…from ‘form-giving,’ in which we are inclined to impose our meaning on the text, to ‘form-receiving,’ in which we let its meaning influence us. …The text is like a bridge between the limits of our life here and now and the possibilities awaiting us if we open our minds and hearts to God.”
· “Many Christians…may be faithful in church attendance and earnest in fulfilling their religious duties and still they are not changed. …Why? Because they have never taken up one of the central ways God uses to change us: study. Jesus made it unmistakably clear that it is the knowledge of the truth that will set us free.”
· “I have learned to distrust speed reading and instant knowledge. Few joys of the mind can compare with the experience of lingering over deft character description, or hovering over a well-wrought passage.”
· “Countless writings underlie the urgency…of rediscovering the value of meditation, of silence, of prayer, of devotion. …The religious life must be fed. …If we bring our minds back again and again to God, we shall by the same inevitable law be gradually giving the central place to God, not only in our inner selves, but also in our practical everyday lives.”
· “Spiritual life is not mental life. …Nor…a life of sensation, a life of feeling… Nor does the spiritual life exclude thought and feeling. It needs both. …If man is to live, he must be all alive, body, soul, mind, heart, spirit.”
· “It cannot be that the people should grow in grace unless they give themselves to reading. A reading people will always be a knowing people. A people who talk much will know little. …Fix some part of every day for private exercises. …Whether you like it or not, read and pray daily. …there is no other way else you will be a trifler all your days….”

What do any of these quotes (or any of the meditations in Chapter 14 not quoted) mean to you? Please post your responses to the blog site.
John

Chapter 13 - Meditation

Chapter 13 focused our attention on 7 scripture passages designed to enlighten our understanding of the Biblical use of Meditation:

Ecclesiastes 12:1-7
Colossians 4:4-9
Luke 16:19-31
Deuteronomy 10:12-22
Psalm 119:97-104
Joshua 1:1-9
Luke 20:41-47

The hymn for Chapter 13 was "O Thou in Whose Presence” by Joseph Swain. (If you are not familiar with the song, just Google the hymn name and you will get multiple sources to read and/or hear it, as well as its history.)The meditation selections included excerpts from the writings of Susan Annette Muto, J. I. Packer, Dorothee Soelle, Kenneth Leech, Mary Strong, Morton T. Kelsey and Thomas Merton. (Googling their names may give you some insight into their backgrounds and experiences, if that's of any interest to you.)

Some of the interesting quotes from the meditations included:
· “Listening means being released from willfulness, arrogance, and self-assertiveness. It calls for respectful presence…, for humble openness… Listening is only possible to the degree that we let go of the grip of our egotistic will….”
· “Meditation is the activity of calling to mind, and thinking over, and dwelling on, and applying to oneself, the various things that one knows about the works and ways and purposes and promises of God. It is an activity of holy thought, consciously performed in the presence of God, under the eye of God, by the help of God; as a means of communion with God.”
· “The creation of a framework, an atmosphere, a structure, is not prayer, but it is a necessary preliminary to prayer. It is within the atmosphere of inner discipline and simplicity that prayer can begin to grow.”
· “When you meditate or abide in your quiet times of communion, you do not charge in and do something, like saying, ‘I will now be good and move mountains by my act of faith.’ No, you water your garden, knowing that these ideas are growing into a heavenly garden; the indwelling spirit doeth the work, not you: you merely water it.”
· “Living things need an appropriate climate in order to grow and bear fruit. …Meditation is the attempt to provide the soul with the proper environment in which to grow and become. …The flowering of the human soul…is more a matter of the proper psychological and spiritual environment than of particular gifts or disposition or heroism. …Meditation is simple and natural, like a seed growing and becoming a tree. At the same time it requires the right conditions, conditions not provided by the secular world today. If meditation is to touch reality, we must seek out the right climate.”
· “…successful meditation is much more than reasoning or thinking. …All good meditative prayer is a conversion of our entire self to God.”

What do any of these quotes (or any of the meditations in Chapter 13 not quoted) mean to you? Please post your responses to the blog site.
John