Tuesday, October 28, 2014

How Great is Our God

I did not always like Chris Tomlin songs, but they are growing on me. This song is particularly meaningful to me because of what happened on Sunday.

I informed the congregation at Countryside that we would be leaving before Christmas. I said a few things during the announcement time, then our board chairman spoke, then we had our closing song "How Great is Our God". It was the most powerful worship experience I had in a long time because I could hear and see the emotion as myself and those around me tried to truly believe what we were singing.

Often we just sing songs we know without thinking of the words, but this time with each phrase I could "feel" people trying their hardest to mean what they were saying to God. With that scene set, read or take a listen:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZFN8TBfgNU&list=RD0ZFN8TBfgNU#t=74
"How Great Is Our God"

The splendor of a king
Clothed in majesty
Let all the earth rejoice
All the earth rejoice

He wraps Himself in light,
And darkness tries to hide
And trembles at His voice
Trembles at His voice

How great is our God – sing with me
How great is our God – and all will see
How great, how great is our God

Age to age He stands
And time is in His hands
Beginning and the end
Beginning and the end

The Godhead Three in One
Father, Spirit and Son
Lion and the Lamb
Lion and the Lamb

How great is our God – sing with me
How great is our God – and all will see
How great, how great is our God

Name above all names
Worthy of all praise
My heart will sing
How great is our God

Name above all names
You're worthy of all praise
And my heart will sing
How great is our God

[3x]
How great is our God – sing with me
How great is our God – and all will see
How great, how great is our God

Friday, October 24, 2014

Photo Friday


This picture makes me sad, because I think about those who have given their lives to save others.

Some of you might recognize this as a picture from Sarah's wedding where her husband and all the groomsmen were firemen, so really it's a happy occasion. We can still think of sacrifice though because husbands should give of themselves as Christ gave himself for the Church.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Throwback Thursday

This is an spiritual autobiography I wrote for one of my classes. I cannot tell which one, but it appears it was written for my first year seminary class. (apologize for formatting issues at the beginning)


I could say that my journey began with my acceptance of Christ and baptism in the summer of 2001. I could say that my journey began years in a small Christian school where I was taught that one could only respond after the preacher says, “With every head bow and every eye closed, raise your hand if you just prayed the sinner’s prayer.” I think I will say that my journey began in 1929 when my grandmother Ruth Pennington was born. She passed away a few weeks ago, but before she died, she taught me how to live a Christian life. She did not raise me, but we typically went to her house every Friday night for spaghetti, Saturday lunch for hamburgers, Saturday dinner for venison, and often Sunday lunch out at Ryan’s restaurant. I do not mean to discount the role of my mother, grandfather, youth ministers, etc, but looking back my grandmother was the most influential person in my spiritual life.

It wasn’t seeing her constantly at work preparing meals for the family. It wasn’t seeing her in church every Sunday passing us a small piece of gum after communion. It wasn’t even hearing her pray. It was something she did not do on purpose and never knew about, unless it is information that is passed along in heaven like modern pop-Christian songs indicate. She had a heart attack in the spring of 2001 and ended up having triple bypass surgery, dying on the operating table, but was brought back through the efforts of a young doctor and the prayers of my grandfather in the waiting room.

That situation was the first time death touched our family and the first time that I truly thought about my own mortality. I realized that I was wasting a lot of time doing things that were not important, committing sins I should not be committing, and putting off my decision to become a Christian. I had felt God calling on me to commit my life for the several years before, but finally decided following a youth trip to South Carolina. I was “on fire” spiritually for several months, started teaching my high school Sunday school class, and read through most of the New Testament very quickly. It did not last and for the next few years I went back and forth from “on fire” to spiritually weak. Eventually I settled on Milligan College during a time of spiritual strength, but over the course of four years changed to and from a Bible major several times.

While there my spiritual condition continued to vary regularly, but I did clearly feel God’s call during the strong times. I learned over those years two important truths: what God tells you in the (spiritual) light, do not question in the dark and what God tells you in the (physical) dark, proclaim in the light. I did not always not question and I did not always proclaim, but I knew my mission.

Near the end of my senior year at Milligan I began to feel God’s call to seminary as a way to prepare myself for ministry. I decided on Emmanuel School of Religion after looking at the Christian Education and Care and Counseling programs at several schools, even though I had little “real” experience in either area. Since I could not figure out which one God had called me to, I chose the seminary that had strong programs in both. In prepared to enter ESR in the fall of 2007, but the finances of it did not work out. I ended up working for that whole year as the Textbook Manager of the Milligan College Bookstore and as the Assistant Secretary of First Christian Church in Elizabethton. My wife and I paid down her student loans as much as we could while she was finishing up her last year at Milligan. In May she took my job at the church so I could focus on work at the bookstore. I was able to attend ESR this fall because of the Tuition Exchange program with Milligan.

During that year off I thought that I would probably end up ministering in some conglomeration of a Christian Education Director and Associate Minister because I thought I liked writing curriculum for children and I did not like preaching. After working with the kids at our church, I found out I do not like teaching children as much as I thought. I enjoyed only the 2nd and 3rd graders and they enjoyed and remembered my teaching, but I felt a stronger call to other teaching. I began teaching the Fidelis Class twice per month, which is composed of women aged 60-90 or so. I just love that class. I also began to teach on Wednesday nights regularly, which was a mixed group of mainly seniors with a few middle-aged folks thrown in. I enjoy that setting also and feel that my lessons are effective. In addition to those two teaching settings I developed a passion for financial counseling, read about a dozen books and decided to pay off my wife’s student loan debt as quickly as possible. I have so much information bottled up inside that I cannot help but wonder what God has in store for my future ministry.

This passion was fueled not only by books but also by personal experience interacting with those who came to the church seeking monetary assistance for groceries, electric bills, and other needs. At first I prejudged those people as ones who were just looking for a handout, were abusing the system, and did not want to work. Some do fit that description, but most are just uneducated in the area of finance and are doing their best to survive and make a good life for themselves. My heart began to break for them as I would see people whose priorities were so out of line that they pay for cable when they have no food to eat or people who just could not make enough money to live due to physical or mental health issues. I want to change all that. To borrow words from Peter and John, silver and gold have I none, but what I have I desire to give. I want to lead people from bondage to freedom, both spiritually and economically. I believe that a person cannot be truly spiritually free and unencumbered while in the bondage of debt.

God did not just lead me to these conclusion or my ideas for ministry out of the blue. I believe that God had a plan even when I thought God’s plan was different. It is possible that this desire and training are preparing me for some other aspect of ministry, but I will not find that out until I get there. I must press on full strength in the direction that God is leading me at this moment, while being prepared to change on turn in God’s time.

God has shaped my life and journey in many ways. Someone much smarter than I developed the acronym S.H.A.P.E to describe God’s work in our lives by dividing it up into the areas of our spiritual gifts, heart’s desires, abilities, personality, and experience. Using that as a model, I will attempt to convey my impression of God’s call upon my life, filling in some of the gaps I have left in the previous pages.

In every spiritual gifts inventory I have taken I score highly in the area of teaching and pastoring. I never figured to use these gifts since I was so shy and reserved in school. Over the years God has given me many opportunities to teach and has released me from some of that fear and anxiety, which has allowed me to be freer in my teaching style and more confident. In my Introduction to Ministry class at Milligan we had to preach a sermon and listen to each member of the class preach. After hearing one person who was as shy then as I was earlier in my life, I wrote on my evaluation of her that my advice would be to speak boldly and confidently because what she spoke about was given to her by God. As soon as I wrote it I realized that I was not following that advice most of the time. Even now I think that I do not always speak boldly when God has given me something to say. At times my shyness, fear, or something similar stands in the way of God’s word, but other times my boldness, arrogance, or something similar stands just as much in the way of God’s word.

Pastoring, though, is completely different from teaching in my opinion. The two can be mixed a little, but I see pastoring as more personal teaching in response to and preparation for life events. In the past few years as I have been strengthening my teaching gift, I have been letting my gift of pastoring weaken. I used to spend a lot of time on the internet in “Christian” chat rooms talking to people about their struggles, trying to help people through tough times, and generally trying to brighten people’s days. This worked out pretty well, I guess, but it is not the same as face-to-face interaction. While I was outgoing and often said the tough things that needed to be said in the anonymity of cyberspace, it is more difficult for me to pastor friends who equally need someone’s help in processing spiritual difficulties, life changes, or other struggles. This is definitely an area I need to strengthen in preparation for working in counseling.

My heart’s desire has changed over the years, but it has never been starving children in Africa, spiritually deprived children in Communist countries, or working with inner-city youth. I thought there must have been something wrong with my spiritual life since it seemed like these were the only things that were “worthy” of having one’s heart focused on. My heart cries out for children struggling without fathers, children whose parents choose drugs or alcohol over formula, and children who grow up always thinking that they will never get ahead in life.

I fell in love with the Shema and the following verses in Deuteronomy during my last year at Milligan. I wrote one paper about it in the Old Testament and one about Paul’s obvious references to it in the New Testament. I became particularly interested in fathers teaching their children the Law of God during the regular, mundane times of the day. It does not particularly say that fathers should teach on the Sabbath, but mainly points out unexpected “teachable moments” that parents can share with their children. This regular teaching is one of the main things I see children missing today due mainly to fathers who are not involved, for one reason or another.

My heart also cries out for broken marriages, both those that have ended and those that are on the road to destruction. I have not seen the damage first hand in my own family, but ever since seventh grade when I realized that over half of my class at a Christian school was from broken homes, I have hurt for those affected by divorce. I have come to think that money problems are the main cause of divorce, so naturally I would like to help fix those issues so that couples can better communicate with each other, better understand each other, and better strengthen each other, and ultimately better present Christ to the world.

Abilities are a tricky thing to talk about. I usually more loudly broadcast what I cannot do well than what I can do well. I guess by virtue of my education I can read well and actually enjoy it. I’m not sure how that fits in to ministry aside from the volumes of information that are opened up to those who enjoy reading versus those who just read when they have to. Maybe writing is an ability too. I do not usually write well academically, but I do write what I feel and can usually better explain difficult concepts by typing them out rather than speaking. More important to me than my abilities, which I usually sell myself short on, are the things I am still not good at but have drastically improved since accepting God’s call. God has greatly improved my public speaking and large group teaching abilities and actually given me a passion to pursue opportunities to practice in varied settings. I used to dread the possibility that I would be called on to pray in public or speak in front of a large group, but now I have more confidence going into it that I am prepared and ready to present whatever information I am called upon to give at that time. I guess I could say that God blessed me with awful penmanship, which encouraged me to learn to type as soon as I could and as quickly as I could. It doesn’t necessarily help me for any ministerial purpose yet, but it does help when putting together a New Testament paper in college at three in the morning. Oddly enough, that was one of the best papers I have ever written because it was like God was writing through me in order to do it well and to do it quickly.

As freshmen at Milligan we all had to take an MBTI test to find our personality types as part of finding our vocation. When they came back, they also had attached to them the most popular and least popular occupations for our particular personality types. Mine came back as the personality to be least likely to be clergy, while the most likely careers for my personality were various management positions. I thought that was ridiculous since I was so shy at the time. It’s funny how God works sometimes. I got a job at the bookstore on campus and moved up to Textbook Manager. I guess I’m doing an okay job since they keep asking me to come back for another year, but in the process of working there, my personality changed. I am not so shy and reserved anymore, but have had to become outgoing and more of a people-person. I think that change has been good since pastors must interact on a regular basis with a lot of people they do not know, but also people that they grow to know well.

I still must keep parts of my personality under control though. My father is a pipe fitter for a union back in Newport News, VA, which is not exactly a union hub. He was the financial secretary, a trustee, and negotiator for them for about the whole time I was in middle and high school. He came back with lots of interesting stories, but I have inherited his lack of patience with people sometimes, particularly people in whom I have entrusted money or given money in exchange for items or services. I tend to want to make sure I get my money’s worth and will contact corporate headquarters if I do not feel I have gotten it. I will call book vendors and quibble over who should have paid a few dollars shipping for a mistake, because I am to be a steward of the money that Milligan has invested in their bookstore. I can get a little rude with people who do not follow corporate policies, so I try to keep that under control as much as possible.

I think it would be best to divide my church-based experience from my experience outside the church. Starting with outside the church, I grew up attending a couple different Baptist schools, so for twelve years I had Bible classes and chapel every Thursday. I did not pay much attention to the Bible until high school, but I did pay attention to the feelings shown by other students who grew tired of the constraints or apparent constraints in their particular branches of Christianity. I was also able to learn how to relate to members of many different denominations. I found what we could agree on and what we had to “agree to disagree” on.

Following high school I attended Milligan College and experienced college life and all, but I guess the most formative situations were a couple of bad relationships. I learned a lot about my own mind and heart as well as about dating in general. Following the second breakup I read several dozen books about relationships, Christian counseling, divorce, pre-marriage counseling, etc because I was able to get them cheaply at thrift stores, from church yard sales, and from two pastors who were retiring and giving away their personal libraries. I was able to experience the heartache that I was able to lead others out of.

I guess my other main experience is death. Death has only touched my family twice that I can remember. My Dad’s mother passed away two years ago, but we were not particularly close to her. I was not able to travel back for the funeral, but have since learned a lot about her life. It was a difficult life, but she was apparently always willing to share her faith, though we did not talk about faith much at her house since my Dad’s dad has never been very interested in it. When my mom’s mom passed away a few weeks ago it hurt my whole family deeply since we had all spent so much time with her. I got word she was in a coma at 6:00am. We immediately left for Newport News and arrived just a couple hours before she passed away. We stayed all week talking with extended family and friends who would stop by the houses. That experience shaped me because I was able to see what it means to leave a legacy and it re-inspired me to live a life that others can emulate.

I have touched on a lot of my church experiences, but I have not mentioned a mission trip to Jesus Place in inner city Atlanta. We hosted a VBS in an apartment complex that we had to “clean up” first by throwing away any drug paraphernalia from the areas we would be setting up. The shaping part of the whole week was seeing the children run behind our vans like children in foreign countries on “adopt a child” commercials. It was amazing to see these kids react that way. All we gave them by way of physical nourishment was a one of those Kool-Aid type popsicles that you have to cut the top off of to eat, all the rest of what we gave them was spiritual nourishment through Bible stories. The only time other time I have seen people react that way to spiritual refreshment was in one of Ted Decker’s books when the Roush celebrate with Elyon at the Gathering. I can’t imagine having such a thirst for the spiritual that I would run a quarter mile or more behind a church van so I could be the first one greeted when its occupants step out.

Earlier in paper I mentioned some of the things that I feel God is calling me to, but seeing my spiritual journey and life-changing events laid out in a row I am starting to understand God’s call a little better. In chapel at Milligan, Curtis Booher quoted a theologian as saying the calling for a Christian is a matter of finding the interception of a heart’s desire and the world’s needs. God may or may not have a specific occupational call for me, but God has definitely given me gifts and abilities that must be used wherever the world has needs and there will never be a shortage of situations in which I must be a good steward of all God has given.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Wildcard Wednesday

Wholly Holey Holy


We can picture holey-ness by picturing a sieve or what the men call “that plastic spaghetti thing.” Holiness then is being wholly, or completely, holey, having the ability to continually drain or sift through sin, preserving purity. Holiness has three aspects: our minds, our bodies, and our actions.

Setting our minds [‘heart’ in the Greek, but that was the seat of knowledge, which is the idea we all ‘mind’] on things above will allow us to sift out what the world tries to put in it, the stuff that we used to live in. “But now [we] must rid [our]selves of all such things as these: anger, rage, malice, slander, and filthy language…” (Colossians 3:1, 7-8). We must not plug up the holes that allow us to drain away the impurities or we will be surrounded and drowned in them.

Cleansing our body, the temple of God, is another essential aspect of holiness.  Paul says, “But among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality, or of any kind of impurity, or of greed, because these are improper for God’s holy people” (Ephesians 5:3). We must let immorality, impurity, and greed slide right through our lives, never giving it a second look. Psalm 1:1-2 says, “Blessed is the man who does not walk in the way of the wicked, stand in the way of sinners, or sit in the seat of mockers, but his delight is in the law of the Lord and on his law doth he meditate day and night.” This type of man, or woman, is the kind who will choose not to listen to sinful groups who vie for his/her attention, who filters everything through the sieve of God’s word, determining whether it is beneficial and necessary or harmful and useless.

Acting in accordance with God’s will is the final aspect of holiness. God fills our lives with his blessing, mercy, grace, and abundant life. We are called to be “cut to the heart”  (Acts 2:37) by God’s word, pierced by the Sword of the Spirit in order that we might pour our God’s blessing, mercy, grace, and abundant life on others. We are to be “living sacrifices, holy and acceptable unto God” (Romans 12:1), yet our cups still “overflow” (Psalm 23:5). That is one of the many amazing things about God, when we pour our lives into other through friendship, service, and love, we have more room for God to pour himself us while we are befriending, serving, and loving.


Holy, holy, holy! Lord God Almighty!
Early in the morning our song shall rise to Thee;
Holy, holy, holy! Merciful and mighty
God in three Persons, blessed Trinity!
Holy, holy, holy! Though the darkness hide Thee
Though the eye of sinful man Thy glory may not see;
Only Thou art holy, there is none beside Thee
Perfect in power, love, and purity
Holy, holy, holy! Lord God Almighty!
All Thy works shall praise Thy name,
In earth, and sky, and sea;
Holy, holy, holy! Merciful and mighty
God in three Persons, blessed Trinity!
God in three Persons, blessed Trinity!

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

It is well with my soul

for those of you who have not heard this song before, you can find it here: http://www.cyberhymnal.org/htm/i/t/i/itiswell.htm

I remember hearing it a few times in my childhood, in fact probably more than that. But the first time it became embedded in my memory was hearing it played at the life celebration of a college classmate who passed away while working out in the school gym. i remember sitting in the chapel singing the songs chosen for that night and maintaining my composure until this song played. it was at that point where i could not control my tears. a friend of mine sitting several rows behind me actually came forward to console me. it was a difficult time for me because it made me question where my final destination would be if i were the one with an undiagnosed condition.

Monday, October 20, 2014

Rock River Christian Camp

Even though I attended Camp Rudolph in Virginia when I was in high school, I consider Rock River Christian Camp to be my home camp. I met some awesome people there during my two years of service. I saw God move in the lives of middle and high school students, as well as counselors like myself. I felt Satan attacking those who would give their testimony, but I saw God how God protects and preserves His people.

If you are looking for a summer camp for kids or adults, I would suggest Rock River Christian Camp in Polo, IL. Check them out here: http://rockrivercc.net/

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Scriptural Sunday

Not my sermon scripture from today, but this verse spoke to me today. I first heard it probably twelve years ago when my home church used it as a slogan to remind people of the big plans that God had in store for them throughout a building project. I memorized it then and it has stuck with me. I realize that it was spoken thousands of years ago to a completely different people group, but I believe God plans for each of His children to be prospered, not harmed and to have both a future and a hope.

Jeremiah 29:11New International Version (NIV)

11 For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Sermon Saturday

Moses VeggieTales would be a fun way to prepare to hear about what God can do through a willing servant.

Friday, October 17, 2014

Photo Friday - Any thoughts?


That's the plan, Stan

I like patterns. I like methods. I get it from my grandfather. They had specific meal plan that they followed for each day of the week. One day was Arby's for lunch and soup for supper or hamburgers for lunch and venison for supper, or Ryan's for lunch and pizza for supper, etc.

Anyway, with this blog I think I need a plan, so here goes:

Scripture Sunday - Simply a verse to ponder for the day

Ministry Monday - I will spotlight a ministry that might be beneficial to you all

Tuesday Tunes - I'll try to write about a song that means something to me

Wildcard Wednesday - Kind of like "anything can happen Thursday", but on Wednesday

Throwback Thursday - Since everyone else is doing it

Photo Friday - One of Kayla's photos to enjoy

Sermon Saturday - Not the whole sermon, just a few thoughts to let you know where we will be going.

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Lessons from a Mason Jar


When I see this picture, I think about the old VBS object lesson where you put the big rocks in first, then the small rocks, then the sand, then the water and the jar never overflows. In our lives we have to do what's important first, otherwise by the end of the day we often have no time left because we have filled our day with lesser things and regrets at the big stuff we left out.

Love

Let's play a game of “who said it.”

“I have a dream that one day right there in Alabama little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers.”

“Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!”

All free men, wherever they may live, are citizens of Berlin. And therefore, as a free man, I take pride in the words "Ich bin ein Berliner!"

So, first of all, let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself -- nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance.”

These phrases summarize the life and work of Martin Luther King Jr., Ronald Reagan, John F. Kennedy, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt. We take pride in hearing these phrases repeated in recordings and reenactments. We can feel ourselves as part of the crowd in Washington DC, UN headquarters, Berlin, or “watching the radio” hearing these famous statements for the first time. While some of us may forget the specifics about the lives of these great men, we will always remember what values they stood for—equality, freedom, unity, and optimism.

What was is the one phrase you remember about Christians? Is it “Christians are such hypocrites”? Is it “hell-fire and brimstone”? Is it “Abortion is murder”? Or is it, “God is love,” “For God so loved the world...” “Love your neighbor as yourself,” or “These three remain: faith, hope, and love and the greatest of these is love”?

Let’s go back to the famous statements for a second. They are famous because each one matched the character of the person saying it—consistency and encouraged others in a time of crisis—necessity.

Christians in the past, your personal past and the broader past, may have said “Hate the sin, love the sinner” to you or someone you know but words of love and hatred cannot come from the same tongue anymore than fresh and salt water can come from the same stream. Love is not consistent with hate. A Christian cannot love God and hate his brother or friend or neighbor or a racial/ethnic/political group. A Christian cannot love his neighbor and hate his spouse. A Christian cannot love his spouse and hate his kids. It is not possible for pure love and hatred to flow from the same person, because when they do, the love is corrupted, dirtied, made impure. God has called Christians to be imitators of God, like children imitating a parent. God has called Christians to be moral, pure, and holy, as God is moral, pure, and holy.

We cannot see God, we can only see imitators of God here on earth. We, as Christians, are not answering the call to imitate the God of the Bible, the God of Abraham. We are tarnishing the image of God by reflecting his love to others in a distorted way, through the lens of immorality, impurity, or greed. 
I am calling all who claim the name ‘Christian’ to allow God to recreate you in God’s image, rather than create a new god in your own image. Because that is what we are doing when we portray God incorrectly through our thoughts, words, and actions. We are giving the world a false picture of God and asking them to follow a God who believes the same as we do, does the same actions we do, thinks the same thoughts we think, hates the same people we hate, and values the same virtues we do. We are not perfect—yeah, I know, it’s a radical concept for some of you—so any God we create by our standards of right and wrong will not be perfect. We must search the Scriptures to find the one true, holy, perfect God and worship that God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength. Then we must take the love that we have been given and love our neighbor. This means to love everyone, even those people we used to think that God hated. God’s character is love, hate is inconsistent with love, therefore God cannot hate people, and therefore Christians cannot hate people.

Because Christians are not imitating God, we are in a time of crisis right now. Our lives are in crisis. Our marriages are in crisis. Our churches are in crisis. Our faith is in crisis. Our environment is in crisis. Our world is in crisis. In times of crisis leaders, both men and women, young and old, stand up to push the pendulum of history back in the right direction. As Christians we must use our power, in whatever form it takes, to stand up and prevent history from knowing our generation as the generation without a name, without a leader, without a purpose. How many people stood when Martin Luther King Jr. spoke about his dream for society? How many people stood when Ronald Reagan demanded freedom for the oppressed? How many people stood when John F. Kennedy cried for solidarity? How many people stood when Franklin Delano Roosevelt smiled in the face of the unknown future?

How many of you will stand as Christians who will accurately portray the one Living, Loving God? How many of you will stand as Christians who will commit their lives to loving God?

Love cannot remain seated. Love must rise up in service and bow down in worship. Love must get its hands dirty out in the fields, the streets, and the schools. Love is only meaningful if it is consistent with action and is most powerful in the greatest crisis.


Love changes lives. Love not only changes lives, it revolutionizes lives. 

What does the Bible say about it's own inspiration?

What does the Bible say about its own inspiration?
Neither the Old nor the New Testament uses the word “inspiration” to describe Scripture as a whole. The closest example of the idea of “inspiration” is the word translated “God-breathed” by the NIV[1] in 2 Tim 3:16. This word, theopnuestos, is only used once in all of Scripture. It comes from the Greek words for “God” and “to breathe,” with an adjectival ending; thus it is translated with the descriptive term “God-breathed.” The KJV translates the word “by inspiration of God,” which is technically a theological interpretation rather than a translation. In order to avoid reading into the text when the Bible uses a rare word, Christians must allow the Bible to interpret itself, only speaking where Scripture speaks and remaining silent where it is silent. This means considering what Scripture has to say about the modern uses of the words “inerrant” and “inspired” to describe itself.
The first places to look to understand theopnuestos are any other instances where God breathes. Of the verses where the word “God” and a form of “breathe” both occur, only a few are relevant to this discussion (Gen 2:7; Job 33:4, 37:9; Ezek 37:5, and 37:9).[2] In each of these cases, God is the one breathing, so one can compare the result of that breath to the result in II Tim 3:16—Scripture that is “useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting, and training in righteousness.” Paul, an expert in the Old Testament, would no doubt have those verses in mind when he chose to use a word he did not use in any other known letter.
Understanding these passages should allow a better understanding of theopnuestos as it is used in II Tim 3:16. In Gen 2:7, “God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul” (NIV). In Job 33:4, “the breath of the Almighty has given me life.” In Job 37:9, “By the breath of God frost is given: and the breadth of the waters is straightened.” In the Ezekiel passages, God says, “Behold I will cause breath to enter you and you shall live” and “Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live.” With the exception of Job 37:9, the result of God’s breath is life, which makes the most sense considering the context of theopnuestos II Timothy 3:16 and 17, “All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting, and training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.” The result of God breathing in II Timothy 3:16 is Scripture that “is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting, and training in righteousness,” leading to spiritual life, and preparation for “every good work.” This does not answer the question at hand though, because the verse is not clear about whether “God-breathed” means the same as what most people call either “inspiration” or “inerrancy.”
            Scripture does not make many universal statements about itself because when it was written there was no clearly defined body of “Scripture” accepted by all Christians. Too often Christians say that the Bible is “inspired”—a word not found in Scripture—and therefore is “inerrant”—another word not found in Scripture. Because the word “inspired” is often used synonymously with “God-breathed,” one should look at “inerrancy” first. Though it may not directly speak about inerrancy, Christians can and should use Scripture itself to define inerrancy. One can do this in two ways, both looking at biblical accounts in context to see what inerrancy is not, and looking back to II Tim 3:16 to see how theopnuestos relates to inerrancy.
            Generally, when one claims the Bible is inerrant, that person is claiming that the Old and New Testaments are without error in areas such as science, history, geography, chronology, and theology. Looking at biblical passages that involve these areas will determine whether they are, in fact, valid ways of looking at inerrancy. First, however, one must define the term “error.” Most Christians define error as either a discrepancy between two biblical accounts or a discrepancy between the biblical account of a story and a known historical or scientific account of the same story. Many books have been written pointing out this type of error in the Bible, but a careful reading of the text will show whether these texts actually contain errors.
            The most common scientific argument against Biblical inerrancy is the creation accounts in Gen 1 and 2. Before looking at scientific evidence, one must read the stories and compare any differences they have with each other. Gen 1 begins with darkness (verse 2), while Gen 2 begins with the earth and heavens (verse 5). Gen 1 has God creating male and female simultaneously (verse 27), while Gen 2 has God creating male and female separately (verses 7 and 22). There are several other differences, but these show the most common non-scientific “errors” mentioned.
            Like most parallel stories in Scripture, these two accounts do not actually contradict each other. They begin at different places in time, one after darkness was created and the other after earth was created, with neither actually beginning at God’s first creative act, which was the creation of the dark void after which He began His orderly work of creation. The two stories appear to show the creation of humanity in two different ways, but they are not mutually exclusive. It is certainly possible that God created male and female in his own image (1:27) out of two different materials (dust in 3:7, rib in 3:22). Just because two writer/compilers portray the same event from different perspectives does not mean one contradicts the other, but that God graciously allows us two viewpoints from which to see his handiwork.
            After addressing the two viewpoints of creation, one must compare the Biblical account to the scientific account. The creation accounts in Gen 1 and 2 may contradict “known science” or they may not. Either way they can still be inerrant. The broader definition of “error” implies a missing of the mark, an incompleteness of purpose. Genesis was not written to prove or disprove modern science; it was written to begin the story of God’s redemptive love for Israel. The creation accounts set that story in motion and introduce themes that are important later in the Old and New Testaments. God chose human beings, his own creation, to pass along the story of his creation to other human beings using words that they would understand. He had no reason to explain plate tectonics, orbital patterns, or the reproductive cycle, so Genesis does not record anything beyond “Let the water under the sky be gathered to one place, and let dry ground appear” (1:9), “Let there be lights in the expanse of the sky to separate the day from the night, and let them serve as signs to mark seasons and days and years” (1:14), and “Let the land produce living creatures according to their kinds” (1:24). Even if God used plate tectonics, for example, to allow dry ground to appear, he, in his infinite wisdom, allowed Genesis to record his personal interaction with nature rather than a rational account that would satisfy modern readers. By understanding the mindset to which the stories were written, the vast majority of all Bible “errors” become not errors but God’s choice in revealing only part of his creative formula.
            The narrative account is not the only type of literature in the Bible; it also includes poetic, prophetic, and pastoral accounts. Each of these genres must be read in different ways. Otherwise, one can easily take verses out of context and read something into the text that is not actually there. Poetry must be read as poetry, prophecy as prophecy, and pastoral writings as pastoral writings. Reading Scripture differently based on its genre is logical but often overlooked, even though doing so would greatly reduce the number of “errors” in Scripture.
The effects of theopnuestos can be seen in several additional ways. For example, in the Psalms, one can find the life-giving breath of God in raw human emotions, like the joy of salvation and the pain of apparent abandonment. Some find “errors” in Psalm 51, which says, “Against you, you only, have I sinned” (verse 4) and “Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my mother conceived me” (verse 5). Verse 4 can be used to contradict narrative account of David and Bathsheba, because David’s sin was not just against God, but also against Uriah. Belief in this kind of “error” represents a misunderstanding of how to read biblical poetry. When the Psalms are read improperly, they are assumed to be a logical, factual discourse on the nature of man rather than an emotional, exaggerated plea for God’s deliverance from sin, which the context suggests.
It is also possible to take Psalm 137 drastically out of context if one does not understand the nature of Hebrew poetry. The Psalm says, “O Daughter of Babylon, doomed to destruction, / happy is he who repays you / for what you have done to us -- / he who seizes your infants and dashes them against the rocks” (Verses 8 and 9). Some say that this passage indicates that God would authorize retaliation against the youngest of one’s enemies. That too represents an incorrect view of poetry as well as a conjecture not supported by Scripture. Upon reading the Psalm, one finds that the Edomites have destroyed Jerusalem and have exiled and enslaved the Israelites. Not only that, but in their exile, the Edomites have asked the Israelites to “Sing us one of the songs of Zion!” (verse 3). After being defeated and humiliated, an Israelite poet penned the words of this story, adding at the end verses eight and nine, which threaten revenge upon the infants of Babylon because Israelite infants have been cast against the stones. Not only do these verses describe a righteous anger against an enemy people who have destroyed the city of David, they also describe an impassioned plea of a battered people for some manner of retribution. The Psalm also gives no indication of God’s response, but by using other parts of Scripture, one can form a theological and anthropological base from which to view the Psalms. Their unmediated pain must instead be read through the lens of Scripture written under less traumatic conditions.
Following poetic texts, prophecies in Scripture produce the most “errors,” because often prophecies, even those made by God himself, appear to go unfulfilled. In Exodus 32:10 God says, “Now leave me alone so that my anger may burn against them and that I may destroy them. Then I will make you into a great nation” because Israel built the golden calf, “bowed down to it, and sacrificed to it” (verse 8). Verse 14 continues the story by saying, “Then the LORD relented and did not bring on his people the disaster he had threatened.” This is apparently an unfulfilled prophecy, which in the minds of some would make the Bible errant and therefore uninspired. Some say God was just testing Moses by saying he would destroy Israel, but that is not important. What is important is God’s purpose in leaving this prophecy unfulfilled. He not only showed his life-giving grace by not destroying a guilty Israel, but also proved that at times his love for Israel supersedes his anger at her actions. This will become an important theme elsewhere in the Old Testament as well as in the Gospel accounts. He also chose to do this in the case of Nineveh; Jonah prophesied the destruction of Nineveh (Jonah 3:1), but when the Ninevites “believed God” and “declared a fast” (Verse 5), “[God] had compassion and did not bring upon them the destruction he had threatened” (Verse 10). Changing his mind in this way does not lessen God’s description of Scripture as theopnuestos, it actually makes it greater since it allows God to “breathe” in more than one way.
The pastoral accounts are often misinterpreted as well, producing “errors” that would cause some people to question the inspiration or inerrancy of Scripture. Paul said to Timothy, “I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she must be silent” and to the Corinthians, “women should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the Law says.” But he says to the Galatians church, “There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Gal 3:28). Most books about Biblical contradictions cite these verses claiming Paul could not be inspired because either he taught two conflicting ideas about women in the church or he changed his mind about women in the church. Neither of these is the case; it is a case of God, in his grace, providing two different perspectives on the similar issues. In order to understand those two perspectives, one must attempt to see what Paul saw then. That is, to study the Scripture and early church history learning about the churches to which he wrote.
In the pastoral accounts, Paul and others give commands, testimony, and wisdom to “thoroughly equip” the churches “for every good work” (II Tim 3:17). In the same way that a coach gives different instruction based on the gifts, talents, and abilities of his or her players, Paul must give different instruction to the churches on the spiritual and personal gifts, talents, and abilities of those to whom he is writing. Some Pauline teaching is universal in nature, just as every football coach says, “Never give up on a play” or a baseball coach says, “Always run through first base.” A careful reading of the epistles allows Christians to see both universal teaching and situation-specific teaching, but not “errors,” because God always achieves his purpose for Scripture.
God not only breathed into Scripture, but he sent his Spirit to guide Christians in copying, collecting, distributing, and interpreting the Bible. God’s use of humans, with all their faults and weaknesses, in both the transmission and application of his word does not weaken the effect of theopnuestos; it actually strengthens it. It shows that God can work through even those people who are not inerrant but do have the life-giving power of the Spirit of God.
 Each of the four Gospels was written from a distinct viewpoint, including and excluding particular stories based on particular purposes, and relying on personal memories that often seem very different from each other. God did not choose perfect people to transmit Scripture or establish the canon, but “chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise” (I Cor 1:27). When the “wise” find apparent errors and contradictions, they sometimes attempt to purify scripture by removing or “correcting” them. However, in an effort to clean up God’s word, they often downgrade important aspects of it. For example, inconsistencies or inaccuracies in the number of Solomon’s chariots (I Kings 4:26 and II Chron 9:25), the condition of Pharaoh’s heart (Ex 8:15, 9:12), the killing of Goliath (I Sam 17:23 and II Sam 12:19) or the size of a mustard seed (Matt 13:31 and 32) can shatter the faith of some. But “errors” such as those do not nullify the inerrancy, inspiration, or theopnuestos of Scripture, because they are not true “errors.” They do not affect the purpose for which God protected and passed on Scripture—which was to be “useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting, and training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be the thoroughly equipped for every good work” (II Tim 3:16 and 17).
Even though Scripture has verses that seem to contradict each other, accounts that might be inaccurate, and teachings that defy logic, it can still be inerrant, inspired, and theopnuestos. Inerrancy refers to whether or not God’s purpose was achieved, while inspiration refers to the effect of Scripture being theopnuestos. Theopnuestos, then, is an adjective used to describe the nature of Scripture as focusing on giving new life to those who read it. One does not need to force pre-Enlightenment, pre-modern texts to fit post-Enlightenment, post-modern ideas concerning inerrancy and inspiration, because God simply chose to describe his Scripture as theopnuestos—“God-breathed”.



[1] All translations come from the NIV unless otherwise noted.
[2] The other cases are Deut 20:16, Josh 10:40, Job 27:3, Ezek 37:5, Dan 5:23 which contain the words but God is not the actor of the verb and Job 4:9 when the breath of God is used to “kill” and “consume”.

First Post

There is no bigger writers block than the first post, but I won't feel so bad if I simply call this a test post to be sure that everything works correctly.

More substantial posts to follow.