Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Fall 09 Exploring Christianity - Wk 4



We continue to be both encouraged by your prayers and recognize our dependence on your prayers. We are increasingly aware of some very desperate, painful, and needy situations at Exploring Christianity. We need you to pray that God would bring forgiveness, and reconciliation, and healing, and hope into these situations. We are very grateful for your partnership in the gospel.

Last Wednesday

Last Wednesday was week three and we over 100 people seated at tables for the talk. I spoke on “What’s The Big Deal With Sin” and very clearly and unapologetically spoke about our rebellion against God. Thus far we have talked about how no one can earn their way to heaven, how God is sovereign, and holy, and just, and loving, and how we are all sinners in need of a Savior.

Several Encouraging Comments

There were several encouraging comments in talking with people. One person said, “After tonight I realize that man cannot fix my problems.” Another person said that she had not be to church in 17 years. Another one is looking for healing after a series of bad decisions. These are just representative of the situations that people find themselves in when they come to EC. We need your prayers.

This Wednesday

This Wednesday we are looking at Jesus under the title “Jesus: Liar, Lunatic, or Lord?” We are going to look at what Jesus thought about Himself and ask the question in our title. We are going to look at how Jesus’ teaching centered on Himself, how his indirect claims to be God were rooted in his claim to forgive sins, judge the world, and give eternal life. We will also look at His direct claims to be God.

We then look at the evidence to support His claim to be divine: the evidence of his work, his character, his fulfillment of prophecy, and his resurrection.

Besides our on-going prayers for God to bring non-Christians back every Wednesday and for us to clearly communicating the gospel while demonstrating the love of Jesus, we have two basic prayer requests this week.

Pray for the New Birth

First, pray for the new birth. At the 2009 Desiring God Conference for Pastors, John Piper presented a biographical sketch of George Whitefield. In it, Piper spoke about how Whitefield’s experience of the new birth affected his preaching.

This means that Whitefield’s acting—his passionate, energetic, whole-souled preaching—was the fruit his new birth, because his new birth gave him eyes to see “life and light and power from above.” He saw the glorious facts of the gospel as real. Wonderfully, terrifyingly, magnificently real. This is why he cries out, “I will not be a velvet-mouthed preacher.”

The new birth had opened his eyes to what was real, and to the magnitude of what was real: God, creation, humanity, sin, Satan, divine justice and wrath, heaven, hell, incarnation, the perfections of Christ, his death, atonement, redemption, propitiation, resurrection, the Holy Spirit, saving grace, forgiveness, justification, reconciliation with God, peace, sanctification, love, the second coming of Christ, the new heavens and the new earth, everlasting joy. These were real; overwhelmingly real to him. He had been born again. He had eyes to see.

The new birth completely changed Whitefield’s perspective. It gave him eyes to see things he would not otherwise see, and ears to hear things he would not otherwise hear, and a mind to understand things he would not otherwise understand. Please pray that God would grant the new birth to many non-Christians this Wednesday night, or next Wednesday, or the Wednesday after – anytime, just pray that God would grant them the new birth.

Pray for Explorer Kids

Second, pray for Explorer Kids. Pray that we would enough workers to care for all of the children, especially the younger children that require more attention. Pray that the workers will be filled with joy, patience, gratitude, care, and energy to demonstrate the love of Jesus to those children. Pray that the CrossWay kids would be a positive influence on our guest’s children. Pray that God would provide everything we need to care for these children, that the workers would serve joyfully, and that God would be glorified in all things.