10 Tweets

Here’s last weekend’s sermon in 10 Tweets, “House” (2 Samuel 7), The David Story: Finding Strength in God 8389024061_378eaa64bf_h

1/ Dale Ralph Davis: “Our text testifies that the kingdom of God is never safe in human hands, no matter how godly those hands may be.”

2/ Don't deify your Christian heroes. But don’t allow human failures to make you cynically suspicious and destructively individualistic.

3/ God is essentially saying 'I’ve always been content to live among my people. I don’t want to live in a palace.'

4/ Hugh Halter: "The incarnation isn’t just about an equation. It’s about an emotion. God wanted us back. He wanted it the way it used to be."

5/ David has no idea that some day God will become a man and “tabernacle” among us (John 1:14)

6/ 'No, you will not build me a house. I will build you a house. I am not like the other gods & following me is not like any other religion.'

7/ If you say Christianity is essentially the same as other religions, you are factually wrong. None are based on God's grace like Christianity.

8/ You either put your faith in him and in what he has done for you or you keep putting your faith in yourself & in what you can do for him.

9/ You can't do God a favor.

10/ No more Davidic kings. The people keep looking for the One…Then Mt 1:1: "the book of the genealogy of Jesus Christ, the son of David"

The David Story Week - 3 from Five Oaks Church on Vimeo.

One More Thing

Hi Five Oakers, The weekend is almost here and there are a few things I want to share with you.

DavidStory-pt2_Slides-2.002

The Weekend

This weekend's passage (1 Samuel 7) is for all of us who want to do something significant for God with our lives. 

David wants to do something significant for God. He wants to build a house for God. He even brings it up with his pastor who gives him an enthusiastic thumbs up. David has received his building permit and is ready to start.

Then God withdraws the building permit. Why? Some of you may know part of the answer, that David is a man of war. But that reason, although one of God's reasons (see 1 Chronicles 22:8 and 28:3), never comes up in this passage. The reasons God gives in 2 Samuel are all reasons with which we can identify.

This passage gives us so much to think about when we want to do something great for God and he says 'no' or 'not yet.' 

FYI

Frederica Mathewes-Green, David A. Croteau, Steve Stewart on "[3 Views on] Is It Robbing God to Tithe on Your After-Tax (Not Gross) Income?"

Over the years, our total giving (including alms) has ranged from 15 to 20 percent. We found, like others before us, that once we determined to make our tithe the first payment each month and this habit became routine, all other expenses fell into place.

 

Seth Godin on "In Search of a Metaphor"

An amateur memorizes. A professional looks for metaphors.

Leslie Leyland Fields on "How We Made Too Much of Gender: Reclaiming an identity more meaningful than manhood or womanhood"

I’m not attempting to usher us all back to the extremes—and bad fashion—of the unisex ‘70s. We need not pretend we are all alike, or that gender doesn’t matter, but gender has mattered far too much. A settled identity as a man or woman or homosexual or transwoman or genderqueer or any of the other LGBT designations will not answer our deepest human longings—to know and be known, to love and be loved by the one in whose image we’re made. Nor do all the delineations for gender provide a way forward for living in our shared humanness and createdness.

One More Thing

From last week's sermon, here is the quote from Eugene Peterson in Leap Over a Wall: Reflections of the Life of David (pp. 150-151):

Holy Scripture posts Uzzah as a danger sign for us: "Beware the God." It is especially important to have such a sign posted in places designated for religious worship and learning. We enter a church or school to learn of God, be trained in knowledge and obedience and prayer. And we do get what we came for -- truth that centres, words that command and comfort, rituals that stabilize, work that has purpose, a community of relationships, forgiveness that frees.

We find God. We change our ways. We repent and believe and follow. We rearrange our circumstances and reestablish our routines around what now gives meaning and hope. We take on responsibilities in the wonderful new world of worship and work. We advance in the ranks and, before we know it, we are telling others what to do and how to do it. All this is good and right. And, then, we cross a line -- we get bossy and cranky on behalf of God. We began by finding in God a way to live rightly and well and, then, along the way, we take over God's work for him and take charge of making sure others live rightly and well. We get the idea that we are important (self-important) because we are around the Important.

Religion is a breeding ground for this kind of thing. Not infrequently, these God-managing men and women work themselves into positions of leadership. Over the years, the basics with which they began -- the elements of reverence and awe, the spirit of love and faith -- erode and shrivel. Finally, there is nothing left. They are dead to God.

Uzzah is a warning. If we think and act like that, we will be dead men and women, sooner or later. Dead in our spirits. Dead to the aliveness of God. Jesus called such people "whitewashed tombs ... full of the bones of the dead" (Matthew 23:27).

Uzzah's death was not sudden; it was years in the making. His "dead works" accumulated within him like the bones of the dead, suffocating the spirit of praise and faith and worship.