Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Seated at the Table

My oldest daughter, Hannah Grace, became a communing member on September 1st and then participated in her first Lord's Supper. As I reflected on her admission, I thought to myself that she has been seated at a eternal table. A table hosted by Christ himself. Just as physical food has nourished her body, my prayer is, this spiritual food help her to mature and draw her closer to Christ.

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Comfortably Numb

"We played the flute for you, and you did not dance; we sang a dirge, and you did not mourn." Matthew 11:17 (ESV)

I sometimes wonder if the greatest threat from our sin may not necessarily be our capacity to do great evil. Rather, we grow comfortable with it over time. When we fail to recognize, appreciate, and mourn over our offense, we can never fully grasp the exceeding joy born out of Christ's love and sacrifice for his people.

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Pagan Poet ? - Part II



"How brittle are the Piers
On which our Faith doth tread -
No Bridge below doth totter so -
Yet none hath such a Crowd.

It is as old as God -
Indeed - 'twas built by him -
He sent His Son to test the Plank,
And he pronounced it firm." [#1433]


I recently finished a book by Wheaton College English Professor Roger Lundin entitled, Emily Dickinson and the Art of Belief, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1998. Lundin's work is a fascinating, but sometimes tedious, study not only of Dickinson's life but also the rapidly changing political, scientific, and religious times in which she lived. What is so intriguing to me about Dickinson is her struggle with belief/unbelief and her willingness to deal with it honestly in her poetry and writings. Lundin writes, "With her numerous poems about God and faith, Emily Dickinson demonstrated an impressive grasp of intellectual history. She realized that she was living through a revolutionary period, when unbelief had for the first time in history become a lively possibility. . .In the end, as one who both doubted and believed, she resembled Dostoevsky more than Melville or Nietzsche. Like the Russian novelist, she won her way through doubt to a tenuous but genuine faith."Id. at 148. I hope that Lundin is correct as to Dickinson's faith, but there appears to be ample evidence from her works to support "virtually any conceivable claim about her beliefs." Id. at. 144.

I had the pleasure of hearing Bryan Chappell, president of Covenant Seminary, preach our traditional joint PCA Thanksgiving service a few Sundays ago. He preached on Romans 15:4 in which Paul writes, "For everything that was written in the past was written to teach us, so that through endurance and the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope." What a good God we worship. Knowing how dense we often are, he gives us the scriptures which show us over and over again how he always keeps his promises. My prayer is that all of those who struggle with their faith and assurance, like Dickinson, might find hope in the Gospel.

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