Jump like its 1983. I don't know what that means but come along with me.
Cold Play
Glastonbury 2024
"I discovered very fast that my way of doing things was going to get me in trouble, and I kept going with it, because I believed the myth for a long time, and I believed I had to destroy myself to make great art.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Townes_Earle
Before I came to St. Martin's in 2012, I was a professor at an American university, and on one occasion, I had a class of 170 students. And I thought I'd ask them what they thought Jesus came to do. I only gave them two options.
Option one was he came to affirm and underwrite the deep purposes of creation and the way things are. And option two was to bring about a great reversal, and uphold those who were oppressed and bring down the mighty. I was slightly shocked to find that two-thirds of them thought the answer number one was the right answer.
I didn't tell them what I thought the answer was, but I was slightly shocked that so many people thought he came to say, it's all just fine, on you go, carry on. The Magnificat is the great statement at the beginning of Luke's gospel that Jesus did not come to say, come, carry on, all's just fine. It's a great song of reversal.
It's a song of reversal in which Mary, as a person pregnant outside what used to be known as wedlock, sees herself and identifies ith the oppressed of the earth and talks about God's great reversal. And it's a way in which Mary personifies Israel in its internal exile and its occupation by the Romans and proclaims God's purposes to restore Israel to its former glory. So we're going to hear a contemporary setting of the Magnificat in a moment.
From Great Sacred Music: Thursday 2nd May: Justice, 2 May 2024
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/great-sacred-music/id1210908650?i=1000654323434
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ON THIS DAY, 11 February 1997, Gikita (Guiquita) Waewae died. He had been ill for some time and had declared two days earlier that he had lived long enough.
What made the death of this backwoods Ecuadorian significant? The answer to that requires a glance back forty-one years earlier. In January 1956, the world learned that five missionaries had been speared to death on the Ewenguno (Curaray) River in Ecuador. On January 8, Jim Elliot, Pete Fleming, Ed McCulley, Nate Saint, and Roger Youderian had landed on a strip of sand in a Piper Cruiser piloted by Saint, hoping to contact Huaorani (also known as Auca or Woadani) Indians with the gospel.
In the past, the Huaorani had fiercely resisted encroachments into their forest, killing many outsiders who ventured near, including members of a recent oil exploration team. The missionaries hoped for a better outcome because they had made contact with the Huaorani in previous months by lowering gifts in baskets from the circling Piper Cruiser. Nonetheless, the Huaorani, led by Gikita Waewae, had speared them.
Meanwhile a Huaorani woman named Dayuma had fled from the tribe because of endemic violence—the murder rate among the Huaorani hovered around 60%. Dayuma lived among the nearby Quichuas. There she became a Christian. Even before becoming a Christian, she had taught phrases of her language to the missionaries who were killed in 1956. When Dayuma's sister emerged from the forest in 1958, looking for her, Dayuma returned to her childhood village and shared the gospel.
Through her, the Huaorani invited Rachel Saint, sister of the murdered pilot, and Elisabeth Elliot, widow of Jim Elliot, to live with them. The pair agreed. The mission team recorded the gospel on phonograph—four short disks of about three minutes per side. As a consequence, many Huaorani learned to follow Christ. Later, Steve Saint, son of the murdered pilot, also worked among the Huao people.
At first Gikita paid little attention to the message. “When I die, I will just become worms,” he asserted. However, within the year he had begun to pray to God before he entered the forest to hunt. Eventually Gikita Waewae also became a Christian. Under his leadership, Huaorani violence declined. He endeavored to rear upcoming generations in faith.
After Rachel Saint died in 1994, Steve Saint, her nephew (known among the Huaorani as Babae), trekked half a day’s journey to inform Gikita. Gikita replied, “Babae, being old I, too, am soon going to die. Going to live, then, in God’s place. I will wrap my arms around your father whom I speared first. There we will live happily together.”
—Dan Graves
https://christianhistoryinstitute.org/magazine
https://us1.campaign-archive.com/?e=56a8dbceaf&u=8afcbca846220ea5008858654&id=223a43d6f3
“Because, as we know, almost anything can be read into any book if you are determined enough. This will be especially impressed on anyone who has written fantastic fiction. He will find reviewers, both favourable and hostile, reading into his stories all manner of allegorical meanings which he never intended. (Some of the allegories thus imposed on my own books have been so ingenious and interesting that I often wish I had thought of them myself.)”
― C.S. Lewis, Reflections on the Psalms“I think we delight to praise what we enjoy because the praise not merely expresses but completes the enjoyment; it is its appointed consummation. It is not out of compliment that lovers keep on telling one another how beautiful they are; the delight is incomplete till it is expressed. It is frustrating to have discovered a new author and not to be able to tell anyone how good he is; to come suddenly, at the turn of the road, upon some mountain valley of unexpected grandeur and then to have to keep silent because the people with you care for it no more than for a tin can in the ditch; to hear a good joke and find no one to share it with. . . . The Scotch catechism says that man’s chief end is ‘to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.’ But we shall then know that these are the same thing. Fully to enjoy is to glorify. In commanding us to glorify Him, God is inviting us to enjoy Him.”
― C.S. Lewis, Reflections on the PsalmsDid Solomon Really Take an Egyptian Bride?
What we learn from the Bible and archaeology
Philip D. Stern October 24, 2023
Not Pharaoh’s Daughter. This coffin cover belonged to a woman who lived in Thebes during Egypt’s 21st Dynasty. Although her name has not been preserved, she seems to have been wealthy and belonged to the clerical class—as indicated by the style of her coffin cover. The woman lived around the same time as Solomon’s bride, the unnamed daughter of Pharaoh, would have lived.
King Solomon was famous for his wisdom and, among other things, his many marital and extramarital relationships. His harem is given at 700 wives and 300 concubines (1 Kings 11:3)—surely an exaggeration. According to 1 Kings 11, he also took foreign wives, some of whom led him to idolatry. For example, to satisfy his Moabite wives, he built a shrine to the Moabite god Chemosh. The biblical writer trembles with indignation when reporting Solomon’s falling away.
the tide of Western secularism.
A second implication is that the church and mission must guard against Christianity itself becoming a new form of magic. Magic is based on a mechanistic view — a formula approach to reality that allows humans to control their own destiny. Worship, on the other hand, is rooted in a relational view of life. Worshipers place themselves in the power and mercy of a greater being.
The difference is not one of form, but of attitude. What begins as a prayer of request may turn into a formula or chant to force God to do one's will by saying or doing the right thing. In religion, we want the will of God for we trust in his omniscience. In magic we seek our own wills, confident that we know what is best for ourselves.
The line dividing them is a subtle one as I learned in the case of Muchintala. A week after our prayer meeting, Yellayya returned to say that the child had died. I felt thoroughly defeated. Who was I to be a missionary if I could not pray for healing and receive a positive answer? A few weeks later Yellayya returned with a sense of triumph. "How can you be so happy after the child died?" I asked. "The village would have acknowledged the power of our God had he healed the child," Yellayya said, "but they knew in the end she would have to die. When they saw in the funeral our hope of resurrection and reunion in heaven, they saw an even greater victory, over death itself, and they have begun to ask about the Christian way." In a new way I began to realize that true answers to prayer are those that bring the greatest glory to God, not those that satisfy my immediate desires. It is all too easy to make Christianity a new magic in which we as gods can make God do our bidding.
https://web.archive.org/web/20150207083930/http://www.michaelsheiser.com/UFOReligions/FlawofExcludedMiddle.pdf
Here is a new situation with a very great potential. Augustine Birrell used to say that every student should be compelled to read books with the point of which he is in complete disagreement. In Bible study a very mixed group, with widely varying points of view, is much better than a holy huddle of like-minded people. Disagreement can be the way to new discovery and is always a stimulus to thought, for we can never be sure of any position until we have defended it from attack.
Another new attitude is that people have come to see that the Bible is a book, not only to be read, but also to be studied. The old system in which a person read a chapter a day, and just read it, will no longer do. The old battle cry that the Bible is its own best interpreter is no longer acceptable. The Bible is a difficult book, written in different languages, coming from a different civilization, talking about difficult things, and every aid to study great books that must be brought to it. The Bible is like all more we bring to it, the more we will get out of it.
In this book I do not wish to persuade people to think as I do; I only wish to make them think. It is my prayer and my hope that this book will enable people to understand the Bible better, to love it more, and in it to see Jesus Christ more clearly.
Glasgow University
WILLIAM BARCLAY
“When Christians feel that they are debtors to those who have not heard of Christ, and that the blood of the perishing may be found on their skirts, when they are brought into closer sympathy with Christ, and honestly and earnestly desire the triumph of his kingdom, so that they are willing to make sacrifices to bring about that glorious result, and when they pray with faith for the promised outpouring of the Holy Spirit—then, as believers in the sovereignty and faithfulness of Christ our Lord, we may look for results such as have not hitherto been witnessed.”
John Livingston Nevius
In 2003 when I was listening to Dr. Siang Yang Tan with Fuller Theological Seminary summarize this psychotherapy research I realized that Jesus knew the results of these studies long before they were conducted! Two thousand years prior to this research he was applying the wisdom that science only recently “discovered.” He is the Wonderful Counselor (Isaiah 9:6).
But can we really say that Jesus is a psychologist? He doesn’t use the jargon of current psychology. He isn’t operating in one of the popular schools of psychology. His ministry doesn’t normally look like sitting down with people and having long conversations. He doesn’t even have a license to practice psychology! Most Christians have not thought of Jesus as having the knowledge and capacities of a great psychologist. But with person after person, including many who were very difficult to deal with, we see that Jesus is “moved with compassion” (e.g., Matt. 9:36). Furthermore, “In him are hidden all treasures of wisdom and knowledge” (Col. 2:3).I think it’s important when we listen to Jesus and watch him help people that we think of him not only as our Lord, Savior, and Teacher, but also as our Master Psychologist. Otherwise, when we have a personal or relational struggle we’re likely to consult someone else as our expert! Or if you happen to have expertise as a counselor or minister then you may look merely to yourself as the source for helping others with their problems.
Jesus understands our needs, problems, and relationships better than anyone. He knows how to help us function at the highest level. Of course, it’s wise to seek help from competent and trustworthy counselors, but to do this in submission to the leadership of Christ. The Lord Jesus is our model in each of the four factors that contribute to effective helping.
https://www.soulshepherding.org/jesus-psychotherapy-research-life-change/