Monday, December 27, 2021

Dan Jones Powers and Thrones Intro and Chapter One

 

Dan Jones, Powers and Thrones: A New History of the Middle Ages (Head Zeus / Apollo Books, 2021)

 

Dan Jones' new 700 page popular history of the Middle Ages, Powers and Thrones, covers more than 1000 years and every continent except Australasia and Antarctica.

 

Jones promises it is going to be fun, both entertaining and informing.

 

He calls his lengthy tome hopelessly short considering its vast scope. Endnotes and a bibliography allow the reader to follow up themes of interest.  

 

Jones traces the term "middle age" (between antiquity and the modern Reformation era) to the Protestant historian John Foxe of Book of Martyrs fame.

 

The story is going to include climate change, mass migration, a pandemic, technological change and powerful global networks.

 

Epigram: Ecclesiastes 1:9-10.

 

An opening chapter considers Rome as the foundation of the Medieval West. Slavery is prominent in this story. A fit young human being imported from Gaul across the British Sea and sold in Londinium might have fetched 600 denarii (about twice the annual wage of an ordinary soldier), if he or she was hard working or good looking.

 

The elite lived in luxury with their silver ear wax scrapers.

 

The amazing Hoxne Hoard (now displayed in the British Museum) was discovered in 1992 by metal detectorists looking for a lost hammer.

 

The unique extent / shape of the Roman empire (p16)

 

Rome’s most striking feature was an extraordinary and enduring military strength. A warrior culture infused politics (p17). 2 to 4% of GDP was spent on the military but this was well over half the state budget. The US today spends around 3.1% but this is only 15% of the federal budget. Both Rome and the USA could bring a rocket launcher to a fist fight so it was best not to mess with them (p17). Soldiers who failed to stand their ground in battle might be cudgelled or stoned to death by their fellows and decimation was used to promote discipline (p18)

 

The golden age of stability and prosperity Pax Romana lasted for 200 years following Augustus’ accession in 27 BC (p21).

 

Non-ethic Romans could join the army and be assimilated to the empire. Values mattered more than birthplace and multiple identities could be tolerated (p25).

 

The Year of the Four Emperors (p25)

 

Vespasian, a former slave trader, was known as the mule driver. He had castrated young boys so as to sell them at a premium. Casual brutality was all pervasive. Slaves were socially dead. Rome (like ancient Greece, Brazil, the colonial Caribbean and the antebellum South) was one of the few true slave states. In Augustus’ time, there may have been 2 million slaves in the Italian peninsular, about ¼ of the population, performing every imaginable role except ruling. Slaves could be worked as hard as the owner saw fit, bred and beaten like pigs or cattle and eventually set free or merely abandoned. No one really questioned slavery and Hadrian and Constantine I made rare attempts to limit the most gross abuse.

 

Rome would remain a potent cultural brand (p30).

 

The importance of Latin (p32f) and Law (p33f).

 

Eusebius on the torture of Christians (p36)

 

The term Diocese (the area ruled by a bishop) ironically owes its name to the arch persecutor the Emperor Diocletian who divided the Empire into secular diocese for ease of administration.   

Friday, December 24, 2021

(24) Fixated on Jesus the Source of Eternal Salvation - Hebrews 5:7-10 (p70f)

 

 

(24) Fixated on Jesus the Source of Eternal Salvation - Hebrews 5:7-10 (p70f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

v7: In addition to Jesus’ prayers in Gethsemane, we might also think of his prayers and cries from the cross. Jesus was not saved from death. He did not save himself but others, despite the (ironic) jeers of the onlookers. But he was saved through death. He punched a hole in the other side of the tomb so that it is not a dead-end but a gateway to glory for the Christian. The tomb has become a womb through which we are re-born to everlasting life.

 

See further Psalm 22 on the suffering and vindication of the Messiah.

 

Maybe as we approach Christmas and we remember Jesus born to die, it might be no bad thing to listen to an Easter hymn:

 

Song: Jesus lives! Thy terror now can no more, O death, appal us - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tYaOHEGgGCE

 

A very merry and Jesus fixated Christmas to you!

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

(23) Fixated on Jesus our Gentle Saviour - Hebrews 5:1-10 (p67f)

 

(23) Fixated on Jesus our Gentle Saviour - Hebrews 5:1-10 (p67f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

On Jesus’ gentleness:

 

He says: “Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.” (Matthew 11:29)

 

See also Matthew 21:5. Or think of examples in the gospels where Jesus shows kindness, compassion and care. Jesus often rebukes the self-righteous religious leaders, but he shows a particular concern for the weak, the poor, the needy and the marginalised. Remember he is a doctor who came for those who know themselves to be sick, not for those who think they are healthy without him thank you very much! (See Matthew 9:12-13)

 

If you’d like to explore this theme of Jesus’ love further, you might be interested in Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers By Dane C. Ortlund (Crossway, 2020)

 

https://www.crossway.org/books/gentle-and-lowly-hcj/

 

I posted some favourite bits etc. here: https://marclloyd.blogspot.com/2020/08/dane-ortlund-gentle-and-lowly.html

 

Song: Only by grace can we enter - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F21gQwATaac

(22) Fixated on Jesus our Sympathetic Priest - Hebrews 4:13-16 (p65f)

 

 

(22) Fixated on Jesus our Sympathetic Priest - Hebrews 4:13-16 (p65f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

What good news it is that God knows us completely and loves us anyway! Our deepest darkest secrets are already known to him. He sees all the skeletons in our closet. And he can deal with it. He has dealt with it in Jesus. We are thoroughly known and thoroughly loved. He knows us and loves us even better than we know and love ourselves.

 

We can’t pretend to God. We don’t need to. We need not fear losing face before the Lord God who sees and knows all things. Embarrassment is pointless. We have no need of masks.  

 

The Book of Common Prayer Collect for Purity reminds us of God’s perfect knowledge of us:

 

ALMIGHTY God, unto whom all hearts be open, all desires known, and from whom no secrets are hid: Cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of thy Holy Spirit, that we may perfectly love thee, and worthily magnify thy holy Name; through Christ our Lord. Amen.

 

We can approach the throne of God’s grace with confidence in Jesus. God’s undeserved love is freely available to us.

 

If we doubt our welcome to heaven, we might imagine Jesus our High Priest praying for us. (Imagine hearing him pray for you. How could the prayers of the perfect Son of God who has died for us not prevail with God the Father?) Yes, our sins are real and great. But so is his love, his sacrifice. His prayers are more powerful than our guilt. We can be sure we will find the help we need. Let us draw near to God, knowing that he will draw near to us.

 

Song: Before the throne of God above - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LULK2nZ6sCc

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Isabel Hardman, Why We Get The Wrong Politicians

 Isabel Hardman, Why We Get The Wrong Politicians (Atlantic Books, 2018)

310pp, pb

I enjoyed this look at the Westminster Bubble, though perhaps it would have been best read when it was hot off the presses. 

Part One looks at how politicians get in, start out, get out there, get on, get caught, get ill and get out. Hardman argues that it is far too expensive and time consuming to become and MP, and that is one reason why Westminster does not have the diversity which would lead to better outcomes. 

A briefer Part Two looks ta why we get the wrong policies. 

Hardman is basically sympathetic to most MPs as hard working decent people. But she thinks the system is broken. 

The main burden of the book is that the culture of Westminster rewards those who want to get into government (normally by being Yes-Men) and that MPs tend to neglect their elected duty of legislative scrutiny either by aiming to be ministers or being pre-occupied by constituency case work and becoming glorified social workers. Hardman also suggests how the role of select committees could be further enhanced to make this a kind of parallel career path as an alternative to government office. 

20 Things To Do In Lock Down / Covid Self Isolation

 The children finished their Covid self-isolation this week.

Matthew (aged 10) has written a helpful list of things to do during Covid [if not too poorly]:

(1) basketball

(2) football (inside or out)

(3) table football

(4) Laser X

(5) PS4

(6) Harry Potter Cluedo

(7) Scotland Yard [board game]

(8) Risk

(9) draw

(10) read

(11) bath

(12) darts

(13) watch a nature documentary

(14) bike

(15) jobs

(16) sort out stuff

(17) quilling [which is apparently some kind of paper curling craft]

(18) maths games

(19) listen to music

(20) wrap presents

Monday, December 20, 2021

(21) Fixated on Jesus our Healer - Hebrews 4:12 (p62f)

 

(21) Fixated on Jesus our Healer - Hebrews 4:12 (p62f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

Do we welcome the wounds of Jesus, our friend (Proverbs 27:6), the divine surgeon? We may need to be pruned if we are to be fruitful (John 15). Sometimes his word will need to rebuke and correct (2 Timothy 3:16). Jesus is kind and wise and skilful. We are in safe hands!

 

The sword of the Spirit (Ephesians 6:17) might slay us but the word and Spirit of God give new life (Ezekiel 37).

 

You might like to examine yourself and repent of sins of thought, word or deed, and sins of omission.

 

You may want to use a penitential Psalm such as Psalm 51.

 

Or a General Confession such as this from The Book of Common Prayer might be helpful:

 

ALMIGHTY and most merciful Father, We have erred, and strayed from thy ways like lost sheep, We have followed too much the devices and desires of our own hearts, We have offended against thy holy laws, We have left undone those things which we ought to have done, And we have done those things which we ought not to have done, And there is no health in us: But thou, O Lord, have mercy upon us miserable offenders; Spare thou them, O God, which confess their faults, Restore thou them that are penitent, According to thy promises declared unto mankind in Christ Jesu our Lord: And grant, O most merciful Father, for his sake, That we may hereafter live a godly, righteous, and sober life, To the glory of thy holy Name. Amen.

 

Song: Search Me O God and Know My Heart Today - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PjAvjYJ71I (cf. Psalm 139:23f)

(20) Fixated on Jesus our Sabbath Rest - Hebrews 4:1-11 (p59f)

 

 

(20) Fixated on Jesus our Sabbath Rest - Hebrews 4:1-11 (p59f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

Jesus said: “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” (Matthew 11:28-30)

 

How is it that we can rest in Jesus? (On what basis?)

 

Why should we?

 

How can we? (How do we receive / experience that rest?)

 

What threatens our rest?

 

Just as we think about the tenses of our salvation (we are saved, we are being saved, we shall be saved) we could think about the tenses of our rest: we have rest in Christ by faith, we should increasingly seek to rest in Christ, we shall be given full and perfect rest in Christ one day.

 

What difference does it make to serve Christ and others from rest, rather than seeking to achieve it by our own efforts? Do we live out of grace, gift, plenty, fullness, rather than from a sense of deficit and desperation, trying to win favour and fill the void?

 

Lord, thank you for Jesus and the rest he gives. Thank you for the reality of it here and now even in the midst of busyness and responsibilities. Deliver me from the sense that I need to justify myself. Give me wisdom about what I take on. And help me to cast all my anxieties on you, knowing that you care for me. Thank you that your grace is sufficient for me. Bring me at last to that eternal and perfect rest which Jesus has won for me. Amen.

 

Song: Blessed Assurance Jesus is Mine - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDeiy9-t2GE

Saturday, December 18, 2021

(19) Fixated on Jesus our Inheritance - Hebrews 3:7-4:2 (p56f)

 

(19) Fixated on Jesus our Inheritance - Hebrews 3:7-4:2 (p56f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

Look again at Hebrews 3v7. It’s as if the writer to the Hebrews makes two mistakes as he quotes Psalm 95. He should have said “So, as the Psalmist said:” but rather he says, “So, as the Holy Spirit says:” Do you see the differences? Of course the Psalms were written by human writers out of and for their original contexts. But the Bible is God’s Word to his church for all ages. What the Bible says, God says. The Bible is breathed out by God, God-spirited. God spoke through David (4v7). The Bible is God’s word which comes to us on the breath of his Spirit. The Holy Spirit speaks the words of Scripture to all God’s people today. We must understand it carefully, of course, thinking about its original context, but the Bible is ever-relevant and applicable to us. It is not just God’s words to them then but God’s words for us now. Christ addresses you and me in the Scriptures by the power of the Holy Spirit. And that same Spirit is at work in our hearts to grant us understanding (illumination). Let us always come to God’s words humbly and expectantly ready to live in the light of all that the Holy Spirit says to us today. May we be quick to repent and respond rightly to God’s Word. (Isaiah 66:2)

 

Further reading: Hebrews 4:12; 2 Timothy 3:14-17; Romans 15:4; 1 Corinthians 10 especially vv5, 11.

 

The Collect for the Last Sunday after Trinity (sometimes called Bible Sunday):

 

Blessed Lord,

who caused all holy Scriptures to be written for our learning:

help us so to hear them,

to read, mark, learn and inwardly digest them

that, through patience, and the comfort of your holy word,

we may embrace and for ever hold fast

the hope of everlasting life,

which you have given us in our Saviour Jesus Christ,

who is alive and reigns with you,

in the unity of the Holy Spirit,

one God, now and for ever.

Amen.

 

Who could you encourage today? This week? How? Maybe you could open the Bible with someone or share something from the Scriptures?

 

Song: Speak O Lord as we come to you - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tPp8ov7cks

 

(18) Fixated on Jesus the Culmination of the Ages - Hebrews 3:1-6 (p53f)

(18) Fixated on Jesus the Culmination of the Ages - Hebrews 3:1-6 (p53f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

You might find this 5 minute Gospel Coalition video from Dr Don Carson on “Jesus is better” in Hebrews helpful: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KbDaRsWi8ho

 

Jesus is better than the prophets / Old Testament revelation

Jesus is better than the angels

Jesus is better than Moses

Better than Aaron

Jesus’ priesthood is better than Levi’s priesthood

Jesus brings a better Covenant

Jesus’ sacrifice is better

Jesus has entered a better heavenly Temple

 

So stick with Jesus! Don’t be distracted from him or drift away from him. Or seek alternatives. Or be seduced by rivals. Jesus is supreme and sufficient. He is the one we really need and all we really need. Let us be fixated on him this Christmas and always!

 

For the word better (stronger / nobler) in Hebrews see 1:4; 7:7, 19, 22; 9:23; 10:34; 11:16, 35, 40; 12:24.

 

Song: Jesus Shall Take The Highest Honour - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hv33W6W_ssw

Friday, December 17, 2021

(17) Fixated on Jesus our Atonement - Hebrews 2:16-17 (p51f)

(17) Fixated on Jesus our Atonement - Hebrews 2:16-17 (p51f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

Give thanks for Jesus, the Second and Last Adam, The Proper Man, The True and Perfect Human Being who shows us Humanity Fulfilled.

 

Now perhaps we are in a better position to give a fuller answer to Anselm’s famous question, Why Did God Become Man?

 

Christmas was for Easter. Jesus was born to die.

 

For every look at ourselves (and our sin), we do well to take several looks at Jesus (and his sinless sacrifice which puts away sin).

 

Jesus brought atonement, AT ONE MENT – his death reconciled us to God and made us at one, at peace with him. We were enemies of God, now we are his friends, brought back, brought home, for the relationship for which we were made. (See further Romans 5)

 

If you have the NIV you may have spotted the footnote for v17 that the word for “make atonement for” means to turn aside the wrath (the holy anger of God) by the payment of a price. Jesus is the propitiation for our sins (1 John 2:2; 4:10). His death in our place absorbs the holy anger of God at our sin. Justice divine is satisfied. God himself delivers us from God’s own wrath by his own sacrifice of Himself (in the person of God the Son).

 

Song: Now Why This Fear - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qIiFIjZGnkM 

Thursday, December 16, 2021

(16) Fixated on Jesus our Preacher and Worship Leader - Hebrews 2:11-13 (p48f)

 

 

(16) Fixated on Jesus our Preacher and Worship Leader - Hebrews 2:11-13 (p48f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

Some evangelicals have sometimes emphasised the New Testament teaching that the church meets for mutual edification, for us to build one another up. But we also meet to worship God and to meet with him in a special way, to renew covenant with him. Jesus ministers to us as we meet. We lift up our hearts and the Spirit unites us to Jesus who is in heaven. We are in him.

 

The minister (duly ordained and called) speaks in the Lord’s Day service not as a private individual offering best thoughts from the Vicarage, telling some jokes and commenting on the news. He speaks as the authorised representative of Jesus. When the Bible is preached, God’s voice is heard. Jesus is speaking to us in his Scriptures and through his servants.

From The Second Helvetic Confession:

“THE PREACHING OF THE WORD OF GOD IS THE WORD OF GOD. Wherefore when this Word of God is now preached in the church by preachers lawfully called, we believe that the very Word of God is proclaimed, and received by the faithful; and that neither any other Word of God is to be invented nor is to be expected from heaven: and that now the Word itself which is preached is to be regarded, not the minister that preaches; for even if he be evil and a sinner, nevertheless the Word of God remains still true and good.

Neither do we think that therefore the outward preaching is to be thought as fruitless because the instruction in true religion depends on the inward illumination of the Spirit, or because it is written "And no longer shall each man teach his neighbor..., for they shall all know me" (Jer. 31:34), And "Neither he who plants nor he that waters is anything, but only God who gives the growth" (I Cor. 3:7). For although "No one can come to Christ unless he be drawn by the Father" (John 6:44), And unless the Holy Spirit inwardly illumines him, yet we know that it is surely the will of God that his Word should be preached outwardly also. God could indeed, by his Holy Spirit, or by the ministry of an angel, without the ministry of St. Peter, have taught Cornelius in the Acts; but, nevertheless, he refers him to Peter, of whom the angel speaking says, "He shall tell you what you ought to do."

(from Chapter 1: Of The Holy Scripture Being The TrueWord of God, written by Heinrich Bullinger in 1562 and revised in 1564 ) https://www.ccel.org/creeds/helvetic.htm

 

Further reading: Hebrews 12:18-end

Song: Now in reverence and awe … Jesus, let me meet you in your word (Graham Kendrick) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LvugGjJwhk

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

(15) Fixated on Jesus our Brother - Hebrews 2:11-15 (p45f)

 

 

(15) Fixated on Jesus our Brother - Hebrews 2:11-15 (p45f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

Isn’t it striking that the words of the Psalmist and the prophet Isaiah are quoted as the words of Jesus? Jesus would have said and sung the psalms in his earthly ministry. And Jesus is the ultimate fulfilment of all the Scriptures with all its patterns and types (pictures, fore-shadowings etc.). Jesus is the true and better David, the true and better King, the Anointed One, the true and better Israel, the ultimate prophet and Servant of the Lord.

 

It is also perhaps a surprising thought for us to think of ourselves not only as Jesus’ brothers and sisters but also as his children (v13). Let’s praise God again for drawing us into his family and making us his sons and daughters and heirs by adoption and grace. Let’s thank God for all our brothers and sisters and pray for them.

 

Thank God that Jesus delivers us from the shame of sin.

 

Let us also pray that we might be unashamed of Jesus and his gospel (Romans 1:16; Mark 8:38).

 

Song: The message of the cross is foolishness To those who are perishing     … I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ https://songsfromscripture.com/i-am-not-ashamed-of-the-gospel

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

January 2022 Parish Magazine Item

 

From The Rectory

 

I confess the parish magazine deadline often creeps up on me. This year I’ve been quite absorbed in Christmas preparation and worrying about Covid (all four of our children tested positive around 9th December), so Simon’s friendly email has jolted me to turning my mind to January. As I write, it seems unlikely that Boris will want to cancel Christmas, and doubtful that he could get his own MPs to vote for anything much, but it would be a brave man who would bet the farm on a normal December and New Year. So this January, what, if anything, can we say with confidence about 2022?

 

Of course the future is always uncertain, but the turmoil of recent years has brought home the sense that anything could happen and it probably will. The Christian faith can give us a fixed point, a sure hope and a certain confidence even in the face of uncertainty and upheaval.

 

We would do well to find some time after Christmas in the new year to take stock. Whatever 2021 has brought, there will be things for which to give thanks. And there will be prayers for the year ahead, for ourselves and our loved ones.

 

In the midst of change and uncertainty, it is a comfort and a joy to know that “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today and for ever” (Hebrews 13:8). Change is a constant of life. Much changes – sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse and sometimes it’s hard to say! There’s so much we can’t know or predict. But we can know Jesus who doesn’t change. And he can’t be improved upon. His love and power are undiminished. The crucified and risen one is enthroned at the right hand of God in glory and he will come again to judge the living and the dead. In 2022, let’s pray that we might live with confidence in the light of the great truths of Advent, Christmas and Easter.

 

PaperbackSome of us recently read Tim Chester’s book Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews (10 publishing, 2020). Like the letter to the Hebrews, it encouraged us to be fixated on Jesus. “Holy brothers and sisters, who share in the heavenly calling, fix your thoughts on Jesus, whom we acknowledge as our apostle and high priest…. Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider him who endured such opposition from sinful men, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart.” (Hebrews 3 and 12) There are worse obsessions. There are all sorts of things which, rightly or wrongly, occupy us. There are many worthy things to which we have to give our time, and some things to which we can be devoted. But the letter to the Hebrews stresses to us the sufficiency and supremacy of Christ. Jesus is better than all the alternatives. He’s the best. He has no rivals. No one can rightly challenge the place Jesus deserves in our hearts, minds and lives. So we ought to stick with Jesus. To be fixated on Him would be a great New Year’s resolution for us as individuals and families and churches. May we be known as those who are always seeking to know, love and follow Jesus more and more. Nothing really matters more for 2022 or in any other year.

 

As Hebrews also urges us, we are to “encourage one another daily, as long as it is called ‘Today’” (3v13). Who could you encourage today to look with you to Jesus?

 

A Happy and Jesus Fixated New Year to you!

The Revd Marc Lloyd

Fixated is available here: 10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

I blogged some thoughts arising from it here during December: marclloyd.blogspot.com

(14) Fixated on Jesus our Perfect Pioneer - Hebrews 2:10, 18 (p42f)

 

(14) Fixated on Jesus our Perfect Pioneer - Hebrews 2:10, 18 (p42f)

 

Fixated: Advent Meditations from the Book of Hebrews

Tim Chester

10 of those, 2020 ISBN: 9781913278953 73pp

https://www.10ofthose.com/uk/products/26683/fixated

 

 It should be a great comfort to us that Jesus our Lord is also Jesus our friend and brother. He was tempted in every way just as we are, yet without sin. He knows what it is like to live as a human being from inside, by personal experience, not just by virtue of his omniscient deity.

 

We can sometimes imagine that Jesus’ temptations weren’t real. But the Bible assures us they were. Though he was the God-Man, he was fully and truly human, weak and vulnerable and limited according to his human nature, just as we are. He got tired and hungry and so on. Jesus’ divinity did not detract from his human temptations.

 

Indeed, C. S. Lewis has suggested that Jesus’ temptations were much greater than ours because we so easily give in to them – and for us, in a manner of speaking, the temptation is then gone: we have yielded to it and it is no more. We fail the test. But Jesus never gave in to sin. He always endured and persevered. He always continued to fight the battle against sin and he was victorious. He was tested over the whole course of his perfect life. And he passed that test. His temptations showed him to be tried and tested.

 

Lewis said: ““Only those who try to resist temptation know how strong it is. ... We never find out the strength of the evil impulse inside us until we try to fight it: and Christ, because He was the only man who never yielded to temptation, is also the only man who knows to the full what temptation means—the only complete realist.” (Mere Christianity)

 

Jesus is “perfected” by sufferings in the sense that he is fully proved and tested. He is like a metal that has been through the fire and is shown to be pure. Or like a veteran who has come through combat. He has proven his ability to resist the enemy.

 

Reflect on the wonderful difference Jesus demonstrates and makes possible (achieves) for humanity. He shows us, and wins for us, a new fulfilled, perfected way of being human. We look forward to sharing this kind of humanity with him in the New Creation.

 

On Christ’s pioneering saving work for us, we might think of this quotation from the Puritan Thomas Goodwin: “In God's sight there are two men — Adam and Jesus Christ — and these two men have all other men hanging at their girdle strings.”  (Cited in F.F. Bruce, The Epistle of Paul to the Romans (The Tyndale New Testament Commentaries; London: The Tyndale Press, 1963), 127 and elsewhere. Apparently from “Christ Set Forth,”Goodwin’s Works, James Nichol edition, 1862, Vol. 4, p. 31.). See further Romans 5. Our standing before God depends not on us but on Christ our pioneer. He brings us in his wake, with him, dangling from his girdle strings. Whatever a girdle string is!

 

Song: What A Friend We Have In Jesus - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SCorW9r_Is

Monday, December 13, 2021

Tim Stanley, Whatever Happened to Tradition?

 

Tim Stanley, Whatever Happened to Tradition? History, belonging and the future of the West (Bloomsbury, 2021)

 

https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/whatever-happened-to-tradition-9781472974129/

 

I found this book enjoyable and thought provoking. Stanley’s Roman Catholic faith is frequently mentioned. Stanley has a PhD in history but is also an accomplished journalist and some of his examples are quite up to date.

 

A few of my favourite moments:

 

“Tradition is not just a pretty thing, much less dead or to be curated - it is the past brought to life, guiding us through the present, offering us a roadmap to the future" (1).

 

He says that - a former Marxist - for a long time he was lost. "My embrace of religion, plugging me into a ready-made community and giving me something to live for other than myself, lifted me out of the doldrums.... tradition can be useful to those looking for ballast, which I think a lot of us are." (8)

 

Tradition has a "fidelity to history" that "rather than tear things up" aims to refine and improve (9).

 

"As Gustav Mahler is supposed to have said, tradition 'is not the worship of ashes but the preservation of fire.'" (9)

 

Leo Tolstoy's 1882 description fits present day social media rather well: "We were all then convinced that it was necessary for us to speak, write, and print as quickly as possible and as much as possible, and that it was all wanted for the good of humanity. And thousands of us, contradicting and abusing one another, all printed and wrote – teaching others. And without noticing that we knew nothing, and that to the simplest of life’s questions: What is good and what is evil? We did not know how to reply, we all talked at the same time, not listening to one another, sometimes seconding and praising one another in order to be seconded and praised in turn, sometimes getting angry with one another – just as in a lunatic asylum." (A Confession, p8) (Stanley, p56)

 

Victorian women enjoyed taking afternoon tea away from the perils of men and of alcohol. But some (perfectly legally) put opium in their cups. For most of the 19th Century, there was more concern about the side-effects of green tea than of cocaine. (Stanley, Tradition p71 citing Sweet, Inventing The Victorians, p100f)

 

The sickness of Nostalgia was first described by Johannes Hofer in 1688 when a man went from home in Berne to study in Basel and developed a terrible fever. He recovered the closer he got to home.

 

In 1733, when the Russian army crossed into Germany, soldiers complained of homesickness. The generals ordered that the next person to make a fuss about it would be buried alive. The problem disappeared. During the American Civil war, doctors diagnosed more than 5000 men with nostalgia (homesickness) and 74 were said to have died from it. (Stanley, Tradition, p79f)

How To Speak, a talk by Prof Patrick Winston

How To Speak, a one hour talk by now deceased Professor Patrick Winston (an American computer scientist at MIT), has had 5 million + views on YouTube and would be a worthwhile and amusing use of your time:

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Unzc731iCUY

 

Here are some of Winston’s points / suggestions:

 

You will need knowledge, practice and talent (in that order of importance).

 

Don’t start with a joke. Start with an empowerment promise: what will your talk do for them

 

Circle round the idea – tell them three times cos 20% of them aren’t really listening at any one time

 

Build a fence around the idea – distinguish it from other ideas.

 

Use verbal punctation – give landmarks so that people can get back on the bus if they fall off.

 

Ask a carefully chosen question (which is neither too easy nor too hard). You can wait seven seconds for an answer even if that feels like an eternity to you.

 

Don’t put your hands in your pockets or behind your back.

 

Watch speakers you admire and think are effective.

 

Think about time and place. Have it when people are awake and not too tired. Have the room well-lit. You need the lights full up or people will go to sleep! Case the place before you speak so there are no surprises. Get used to or deal with any weirdness / challenges. Get the right size place so that it is reasonably populated – not packed but more than half full.

 

A board / flip chart is flexible and graphic and speedy. A board gives you a target to point at. (Think about what you do with your hands).

 

Consider using props. They are very memorable.

 

Chalk / props help with empathetic mirroring – you can kind of feel it when the speaker does it in a way you can’t with PowerPoint.

 

Could you critique my PowerPoint slides? Yes! You have too many with too many words.

 

Do not read out your slides. Your listeners can read and you reading the slides out will annoy them.

 

Stand near your slides.

 

Either the slides are condiments to what you are saying or the other way around.

 

Get rid of the background junk which is a distraction. Get rid of the words. Get rid of clutter. Simplify.

 

We only have one language processor. We can only either read or listen.

 

40 point is probably the minimum font size for slides or you will have too many words.

 

Don’t use a laser pointer. You lose contact with your audience. Put a little arrow if you want to point out something in your slide.

 

Allow space and air – don’t make your slides too content / word heavy.

 

People are inspired by expression of passion.

 

How to think: we are storytelling animals. Provide the stories people need to know, questions to ask about them, ways to put stories together.

 

Speaking of academic job interview technical talks: you need to show people some kind of vision (a problem that someone cares about and something new in your approach) and that you’ve done something (talk about the steps that need to be done to solve the problem) within 5 minutes. Show your contributions.

 

If your ideas are to be memorable / recognised they must have:

Symbol

Slogan

Surprise

Salient idea – an idea that sticks out (not just lots of good ideas)

Story

 

How to stop. End with a slide that tells them what you have contributed – the distinctive thing you have told them.

 

If you finish with a joke, people might think they’ve had fun all the way through!

 

You could end by saluting the audience (or finding some other conventional ending).