I
pray this finds you all resting in the joy and peace of the Lord.
That really is what Christmas should be about, isn't it? Instead we
find ourselves exhausted and worn as we hustle from party to party
and scurry from store to store. We do this in preparation to
celebrate the birth of one who was born in a stable, spent his
childhood on the lam, apprenticed as a carpenter, was homeless in
his prime and was buried in a borrowed tomb. Seems crazy, doesn't it?
Well, we also do it because he was born of a virgin, lived a sinless
life, died a substitutionary death as an atonement for sins, was
raised from the grave, sits at the right hand of God, and will return
to judge the living and the dead and to take the church as His bride.
Still seems crazy, right? Yet we do it, and fight for the right to
call it Christmas, because we are in, but not of the world. We do it
both because of our cultural Christianity and we are Christians in a
pagan culture. It still seems strange that we run past a holiday
called Thanksgiving to get to the business of Christmas consumerism
as a means of celebrating the birth of an impoverished, crucified
man, who reigns as the eternal King of a spiritual kingdom. Oh well,
peace on earth, good will to men. I pray we will all find a place
beyond the noise to be still and know that He is God.
Reid is the President of Legacy Ministries, and author of Legacy Leadership: Principles for Leaving a Spiritual Legacy. He serves as Pastor of Family and Student Ministries at Morningview Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. Reid has a passion for discipleship and family ministry. Reid and his wife, Rayanne, have four children: Trinity, Elijah, Zachariah and Aaron.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Family: A Theological Crisis
I wanted to pass along an article published yesterday How Did This Happen? The Family Crisis as a Theological Crisis by Albert Mohler. It is a great look at how our the theology of family can contribute to the current family crisis in our culture, or how it can defend the family form this crisis. He does so by looking at four main theological facts about the family, and how they relate to the current crisis. I pray it is clarifying, encouraging and challenging.
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