Great Hymns Series: II

Ok, here we go again: part 2 in our Great Hymns series!

Daniel Webster Whittle lived in Massachusetts in the second half of the 19th century. He fought in the civil war, worked for a watch company in Chicago, and worked as an evangelist.

It was after being injured and while in a prisoner of war camp that he first read the New Testament. When he was still not a Christian he was asked to come to a young dying soldier’s bedside to pray with him. Whittle agreed, and recorded this of their encounter:

I dropped on my knees and held the boy’s hand in mine. In a few broken words I confessed my sins and asked Christ to forgive me. I believed right there that He did forgive me. I then prayed earnestly for the boy. He became quiet and pressed my hand as I prayed and pleaded God’s promises. When I arose from my knees, he was dead. A look of peace had come over his troubled face, and I cannot but believe that God who used him to bring me to the Savior, used me to lead him to trust Christ’s precious blood and find pardon. I hope to meet him in heaven.

And he is the writer of the incredible hymn – I Know Whom I’ve Believed

I know not why God’s wondrous grace
To me He hath made known,
Nor why, unworthy, Christ in love
Redeemed me for His own.

Refrain

But I know Whom I have believèd,
And am persuaded that He is able
To keep that which I’ve committed
Unto Him against that day. (2 Timothy 1:12)

I know not how this saving faith
To me He did impart,
Nor how believing in His Word
Wrought peace within my heart.

Refrain

I know not how the Spirit moves,
Convincing us of sin,
Revealing Jesus through the Word,
Creating faith in Him.

Refrain

I know not what of good or ill
May be reserved for me,
Of weary ways or golden days,
Before His face I see.

Refrain

I know not when my Lord may come,
At night or noonday fair,
Nor if I walk the vale with Him,
Or meet Him in the air.

Refrain

Check out this re-setting of the hymn by Stuart Townend (the alterations to the lyrics are his.) Scroll down to the Personal Worship/Say the Word CD set in the link. It’s track 8, re-titled ‘I Know Not Why God’s Wondrous Grace.’)

Gospel mercy v cultural mercy

This last month we have been thinking about what we value most as a church. Three of our core values are: missional, merciful, prayerful. And I have been thinking about how these three values are inextricable fruits of the gospel.

While reflecting on mercy, it occurred to me that gospel mercy is much different from every other kind of mercy I have encountered in our culture. Gospel mercy springs from the free grace of God to sin-soaked, enslaved rebels and traitors. And it completely changes how we understand mercy. Let me explain why.

In our culture, mercy is the right thing to do; indeed the culturally ‘hip’ thing to do. It is therefore done for two reasons, both flowing out of this cultural perspective. First, it is done out of duty. Second, it is done to feel good about ourselves, because we have done the ‘right thing.’ Take a look at all the publicly funded, publicly trumpeted charitable walks, races and ribbons and you will see this perspective all over the place.

Two results flow from the culture’s attitude. The first result is a subtle self- righteousness; we think we are pretty good when we do mercy. The second result is a subtle superiority over the person we are offering mercy toward. We are there for ‘their good.’ What we are really saying is that we are their good. ‘We’ are not ‘them’; we are better than them.

Do you see what lies at the heart of this mercy impulse? Selfishness; it is about us at the end of the day. We are dutiful, or we are good, or we are progressive and enlightened. It slides into being about us. And it divides us subtly, but surely, from those whom we would give mercy to.

That is why, when Jesus told the story of the Good Samaritan, he deliberately included two people who should have helped the robbed, beaten, half- dead jewish man on the Jericho Road. Jesus had both a Levite and a priest – the two classes of people in Jewish society tasked with helping to care for the poor- walk right by the beaten man. They were Jews; he was jewish. They were one with him – but they passed right on by; why?

Because when push comes to shove, when giving mercy becomes dangerous or inconvenient, duty is not enough. It does not give us enough motivation to give mercy – not when our life might be at risk – and in the case of the beaten man, the danger implicit in helping him on a dangerous road were higher than the benefits of feeling good about ourselves.

But in the gospel, mercy is much, much different. Mercy is what a loving God did to us. Mercy is what the holy God, who was under no obligation to help us, did for us. God came all the way down to us; to that beaten man on the road – because that beaten man was us, and is us. We are beaten, beaten and robbed by our sin, our selfishness, our rebellion. We are near death – spiritual death, because of our own choices. And God, like the Samaritan man seeing a hated Jewish stranger on the road, had no natural obligation, outside His own pure love and grace, to render any help at all.

Gospel mercy sees that beaten man on the road and says; ‘that is, really, me.’ Gospel mercy does not pity the broken, but identifies with the broken. Gospel mercy sees me in that addict strung out on the bench; gospel mercy sees me in that homeless shelter.

But gospel mercy goes even deeper. In the gospel, God did not just pick us up off the road and help us, as the Samaritan did for the poor beaten Jewish man. he exchanged places with him, took the beating for him- indeed, died on his behalf, for his healing!!!

So that broken man on the side of the road isn’t just , in some very real way, identified with me- he is also, in a very, very real way – identified with Jesus. That is Jesus i feed when I feed him; that is Jesus I warm when I give her a blanket.

That is mercy without self-righteousness; mercy without duty, mercy without reserve or qualification, mercy that will go the distance and brave the danger and bind up the brokenhearted and do whatever it takes to love my neighbor.

That is the mercy God showed me in His Son. That is the mercy in the gospel I believe and preach. That is the mercy in the gospel I am called to live and incarnate. The gospel of the free grace of God is the gospel of the radical mercy of God. They cannot be separated. May God unite them in my heart and my life today.

Reading through the Bible in a year

I am trying to read through the Bible in a year. I do this about every second year, and I always find it both rewarding and challenging. The sheer breadth of issues covered by the scriptures always surprises me when I do this, and the wisdom and literary beauty of the scriptures puts me in awe.

But I always feel like I need to race through to keep up. Not sure how to balance these things, but still it is worth it.

Faith, Football, and an Advertisement

I am a football fan. Undoubtably, Superbowl is celebrated as a major holiday in my family, and the traditions of having big parties, devising an enormous technical contraption for a big screen TV and making the trip to CostCo for those big bags of chips will remain for a while.

Superbowl advertisements is another huge tradition within the superbowl culture, and a lot of controversies arise from them. And this year, like other years, there’s a controversy on an advertisement that is to air in a few days.

Tim Tebow, perhaps the most famous college football player in the last few years and a vocal believer, is making a stance against abortion. Tebow’s mother was very ill during her pregnancy and the doctors advised her to abort the baby. She refused. A few months later, Tim was born.

Putting our political views aside, we must take a deep look at Tim’s approach to football and his career. He faces an uncertain future in the NFL (many pundits say that he won’t be playing in the NFL) yet he has so many ways he could make easy money with his fame. Despite that, he used his time and his platform to stand for something he believed in. He took a stance on his view on abortion, and he put his future, his popularity, and his platform in jeopardy.

Then we see how we approach our jobs and careers. Often we “sell out” on our faith in Christ to gain ground in our careers and money. If we are honest with ourselves, we often keep our faith and our profession as far away from each other as possible so that our faith doesn’t ruin our career. In fact, we are so worried about our faith ruining our professional standing that we pre-emptively shoot down any sign of our faith. Think about the last time someone cursed God in your office. Think about your last time at the pub. Don’t we protect our career from our faith?

Most of us laugh at the “John 3:16” verses in the sporting events. Heck, I don’t even like Tim Tebow showing a verse on his eye black! But, at least they aren’t afraid of letting the world know about their devotion to Christ.

To read more about Tim Tebow’s commercial and one sportswriter’s view on it, please click here.

Merciful is Missional – and vice versa.

There is a small brouhaha in the corner of the blog world that I occasionally surf over the precise relationship between being merciful and being missional. There is some reason for it; the word ‘missional’ has so many meanings today that it probably means milkshake to someone out there.

But really. The Lord jesus said clearly that we are called to ‘go and make disciples, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit…’ (Matthew 28:18- 20). We are called to proclaim the gospel in word; ‘you shall receive power when the Holy spirit is upon you, and you shall be My witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth (Acts 1:8-9).’

He also said we are to show our discipleship following of him by showing mercy and doing justice: see His clear teaching here.

So when respected Christian leaders say that an emphasis upon social justice may lead to theological slippage, they are, I think, getting the cart before the horse. It is true that historically, some churches and denominations departed from biblical orthodoxy in the early 20th century, retaining only a strong biblical sense of social justice. In response, orthodox evangelical churches grew wary of both the doctrinal departure of many mainline churches, and of the social justice that they emphasized. The first wariness is healthy, wise and necessary. But the second wariness – of embracing social justice – needs to end. Now.

Mercy is not an option. Mercy is a reflection of the gospel of God who had mercy upon poor, miserable, sin-addicted self-destructive slaves – you and me. The gospel is all about mercy. Jesus showed spiritual mercy, physical mercy, social mercy, relational mercy in His ministry; he foreshadowed the new Creation He will one day bring in.

And, by the way, mercy is missional. Mercy puts credibility to the message in a way that almost nothing else does. Mercy makes the gospel real, shows it’s transforming power, and validates the reality of the Spirit to a skeptical world. In the words of a Vancouver church planter: ‘mercy may be our final apologetic.’

Mercy, then, is embedded within the gospel. Let us learn to love justice, to do mercy, and to preach the grace of God in Christ contagiously and consistently.