A Staff Devotional for the 2010 Conference Team

Friday, April 30, 2010

30 April: Assignment 1

Any introduction into Bible study will tell you there are 3 basic stages: Observation, Interpretation, and Application. This weekend in these devotions, we are going to spend a little time in putting these into practice. Today, read through Genesis 48-50 and write down 5-10 observations about ch. 50. Do this and you're done for the day.

Now, suppose this is someone's first time doing observation, what would he do (let's call him Josh)? Let's also suppose, for sake of example, that he wants to draw some observations from Ps. 39. First Josh would read the Psalm (and, because it's short and amazing, he'll read it a few times). Next, Josh will write down a few things he notices. His list may start out looking something like this:

1. The author starts with a decision to be silent.
2. The opening verses each have a certain, 3-phrase format.
3. The closing verses don't.

His list can also include questions which he hopes further study to address:

4. Why is there an interplay of silence and speaking?
5. What significance does the 3-phrase format have?

But also notice what sorts of things do not make the list; questions or assertions which would belong in one of the other two categories. For instance, Josh is not trying to make sense of what he's seeing in Ps. 39 (that's for interpretation) nor is he wondering if this Psalm is telling him that he needs to be silent (that's for application). He only notes what he sees and what interests him and that's exactly what you should do in today's assignment to have 5-10 observations from Genesis 50. Just read that chapter (more than once if you have time) and write down what you see. You'll use this list for Saturday's lesson.

Happy seeing.

Friday, April 23, 2010

April 23: Home and the Heart

I have been to about 10 conferences since I started working for Apologia (most of them last year). I have set up hundreds of books, described notebooking journals again and again, and downed gallons of coffee. It wasn’t until this weekend that I have been invited to someone’s home (multiple homes, actually). I don’t begrudge any past conference planners or the locals for not extending invitations; we were there on business, had hotel rooms and meals - we obviously were not in want. It just struck me how beautiful hospitality can be.

Hospitality, it seems, is not just opening up your house; hotels and restaurants do this and we don’t think them more virtuous for doing so. Hospitality is opening up the home, where you live and what’s close to you; in a sense, it’s opening up yourself to others. But it’s not self-disclosure or being friendly (if it were, we wouldn’t have much use for the word ‘hospitality’); it’s something more, it’s inviting someone to be with you in an atmosphere warm and comfortable because you’ve lived there.

Hospitality is an invitation into your peace. Think about it for a moment, if you go over to a home with subtle or overt tension between children and parents (or husband and wife), there’s no place for you to sit, and the dog keeps growling at you - do you walk away from this experience thinking you’ve just tasted premier hospitality? Doubtful; we know it’s something better than that. Hospitality is a warmth which welcomes YOU, this points to another one of its aspects, attentiveness.

All of the great hosts I’ve ever had always took especially good care of me. They welcomed me, fed me, talked with me, and made sure I was never inconvenienced. I got a good seat, a full glass, a thick slice of cake, and God was thanked because I had come over. I was receiving special honor as the guest and I sure knew it. I remember being in a homeschooling house a few years ago and seeing one of the most beautiful moments of parenting as the mom called her girls into a schoolroom and talked to them about how to be gracious to guests. I don’t recall her specific instructions, but the theme was inescapable: hospitality is about serving and giving. Though this sums up more than just hospitality, one cannot be hospitable without it.

Eugene Peterson talks about giving as he recalls seeing a pair of adult birds feeding their chicks for hours. At one point, they decided mealtime had ended and it was time to fly. One by one the little birds were muscled off the limb, left hurtling to the ground until, in some frantic, mid-air epiphany, they began flapping their wings and stopped their crash. He writes, “Some of us try desperately to hold on to ourselves, to live for ourselves. We look so bedraggled and pathetic doing it, hanging on to the dead branch . . . for dear life, afraid to risk ourselves on the untried wings of giving. We don’t think we can live generously because we have never tried. But the sooner we start the better, for we are going to have to give up our lives finally, and the longer we wait the less time we have for the soaring.”

We had dinner one night with the family who planned the conference. Before we left, the hostess made sure we understood that her door and family were as open to us as if they were our own. We had no need for loneliness; family was close. It is in this aspect, the availability of an inviting family, that allows us to be hospitable people, regardless of whether we are home, working a conference booth, getting mail from the mailbox, or anywhere we go. More than anything else, it is a perspective which asks, “How can I serve you, give to you, so that you know you are welcome? How can I do good by you? How can I share the peace I have with you, so that you are blessed?” If home is where the heart is, then the quality of the home comes from the health and attitude of the heart. When people meet you and talk with you today, will they know that you count it an honor to have gotten to spend some time with them? Will they feel welcomed into your day, your life? They should.

Read these Scriptures (John 14:1-4; Phil. 2:1-5; Heb. 12:1-2). Then, in your journal, articulate a Bible-based view of hospitality. Then answer the question, “Do I do this?”

Friday, April 16, 2010

April 16: Superheroes

I grew up reading comic books. I can still remember being introduced to them by my childhood friend, Ken, and discovering this imaginative world of people who stood out from the populace because of unusual powers and insights. It never crossed my mind that the trade off for this life was an inescapable wardrobe of spandex; they could fly, shoot things out of their eyes, lift oil tankers and look cool doing it. These heroes seemed other worldly (sometimes they were), even to the other characters. They were better than the world they protected and it did not deserve them, whether or not it knew or acted like it.

More than half of my time of leafing through comics was to learn from the artists on how they drew my heroes. I would spend hours sitting cross-legged at the coffee table trying to improve my renderings of human proportions so that these sketches would look slightly believable. Sometimes I would erase holes through the paper trying to get certain lines just right. There were a lot of failures.

Recently, a cousin of mine asked me to draw her a picture of Batman (which I’ll post on my other blog if I ever do). After a little casual research, I found out that one of my favorite artists from childhood had actually drawn a few issues and that my local library would let me check those out. I read them all today on my travels and found something I had not really expected: great writing. I don’t think I’ve ever turned pages with such eagerness. The art was still phenomenal, but so was the plot. What I missed all through my youth now was inescapable: the heroes on my five-year-old pajamas and lunch pails suffered silently and greatly to be who we loved them to be. What strikes me now is how clearly comic book writers identify this trial intimately with heroism. Part of humanity is that greatness will cost you - our heroes most of all (cf. Luke 12:48; 22:24-27; John 12:24).

The Bible has a significant place for the rewards and praises which God bestows on men. Though not an inspired title, “The Hall of Faith” in Hebrews 11 shows us some of the greatest displays of valor, honor, and faith. Each person there receives his or her acclaim because of belief in God, no matter what he or she had to suffer and give to do so. The hall closes when the author says he lacks the space for a full treatment of the subject and hastens to cover his ground by just listing their trials. In his final phrases, he describes them as those “of whom the world is not worthy” (v. 38); for whom only heaven is the appropriate place (cf. v. 40). If this world does not deserve them, they must be a gift to it, but of what sort?

I still have a certain, nostalgic fondness surface every time I pass the comic book store up the road from my house. I still occasionally visit that world of the imaginary and delight in the artistic presentation of great feats I could never do. But two-dimensional heroes hold the attention for only so long. They are good anecdotes and illustrations, but they eventually become hollow - I want flesh and blood to show me a heroism a man can reach. That’s why I appreciate the Bible; that’s why I appreciate getting to know the people I do - because what I see there are benchmarks of nobility made by men. Not only that, it’s a nobility that I just might be able to reach because of the God I know. These are the heroes, more than the masked ones, worth knowing.

Journal: Who inspires you? Write out a few people and why they do.

Friday, April 9, 2010

April 9: Why Bother?

We were rounding up our last night of review for Senior Seminar (our exit exams for grad school)when Jim asked a question a lot of us sometimes think about certain doctrines. “I understand why the school believes in its position on End Times prophecy, but what is the use in getting into all of those details? I mean, if we believe that Jesus is coming back and God making everything perfect in the end (i.e., New Heavens and New Earth), why do we need to get into to the rest of it since it causes such division and seems to have little bearing on our daily life?”

Before you read on, write out your own answer to the questions Jim raised: What should be done about a doctrine which serves as the basis for so much disagreement?

My professor, an insightful, old Messianic Jewish man responded in a fantastic way,

“Your point is well-taken. Your point is well-taken. First, I would say this: It’s there, so we have to climb it. We can’t do anything about it being there except recognize that God inspired a tough topic to be in the Bible, but we can try to understand and deal with it.

“Next, all of the times the New Testament mentions End Times, it does so in connection with a practical application, so this should not be a concern.

“Last, sometimes it seems that we can achieve godliness if we stay away from doctrines (like this one), but I think you’ll find that the closer you get into seeking out the truth, the more you’ll find it helping your closeness with God. Jacob didn’t wrestle with God at a distance (but up close) and saw God’s face because of it.”

I would add, too, that truth is a worthy pursuit regardless of its practical application. Also, if unity is something we seek, we should note that people unify AROUND something. If we do not do it around truth, what do we use? Silent agreement that certain topics ought not be discussed? I don’t think that is the sort of unity Jim had in mind when he asked his question.

What I find sometimes in my own study is a tendency to skip over what I don’t know or understand when I’m reading my Bible. My reading may raise a question in my mind, but I keep on, after all, I need to finish my reading for the day. In the process, I do complete my reading goal for the day, but if I never go back to chase some of those questions, I miss out on chances to grow in their investigation.

So, how about you? When’s the last time you studied something you didn’t understand about your faith? When is the next time you will? In your journal, write out a prayer to the Lord. Pray to Him about what you want out of your time in the Bible and ask Him to teach you through it. (this next part is optional) Ask Him to show you something to study which causes you to dig into His Word to find the answer. Write out a few ideas of things to study (if you are not currently chasing down something) and pick a date when you’ll start on one.

Get ready for the chase. It will be good.