Devotionals from websites and for email

 Looking to have devotionals, Bible verses, or other inspirational content sent straight to your inbox? 

These are from us and our sister ministries and friends… 

http://www.intothyword.org/pages.asp?pageid=56867 

http://sites.silaspartners.com/CC_Content_Page/0,,PTID34418_CHID200523_CIID,00.html

http://www.biblestudynotes.org/directory 

http://www.biblegateway.com/newsletters/ 

http://www.myutmost.org/

 http://utmost.org/# 

http://www.heartlight.org/devotionals/

 

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How to Build a Devotional Life

I am speaking at CMTA, Christian Ministries Training Association, this weekend, April 29th my 20th year…used to be ‘Youth Ministry’ in the 80’s, then ‘How to study the Bible’ in the 90’s, then Pastors in the 0’s, wow, this time a different subject,

How to Build a Devotional Life Sat the 30th of April  

8:30 a.m. – 9:45 a.m. room 205 

Do you feel your life in the Word is dull and cold? Do you strive to grow deeper in the faith but find yourself confused and frustrated? Then come and find out how to draw nearer into the heart of God, building a life of impacting faith, purpose and distinction!

http://www.cmtaconvention.org/workshops-tracks-adults.htm 

Here are the handouts: 

FocusingonChrist.pdf 

http://60132.inspyred.com/images/Focusing%20on%20Christ.pdf 

HowtohaveaDevotionalTime.pdf 

http://60132.inspyred.com/images/How%20to%20have%20a%20Devotional%20Time.pdf 

DevotionsImportant.pdf 

http://60132.inspyred.com/images/DevotionsImportant.pdf 

Also I am leading the TECHNOLOGY / COMMUNICATIONS track, lots of great speakers a must event to attend!  

http://www.cmtaconvention.org/workshops-tracks-technology.htm 

And do not forget to visit the Into Thy Word booth there too!  

…if there is anything you need for your church or Christian life, we will have it at CMTA!

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How to Deal with Anger!

Some of you asked for this, it is a chapter from my book “Field Guide to Healthy Relationships”:  

How to Deal with Anger 

Brothers, if someone is caught in a sin, you who are spiritual should restore him gently. But watch yourself, or you also may be tempted. Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ. Galatians 6:1-2  

The problems we face in life will often lay the groundwork for how we mature and deal with life. In the midst of these will be our response to our circumstances which can either erupt into anger or be smoothed over by love. It is all about how we choose to deal with problems. Thus, we need to be aware that problems are coming toward us right now. We are either in a problem, going though more than one problem, getting out of a problem just to be headed into another one. We have a choice of how to handle it and that choice will either benefit us and those around us, or tear everyone around us apart, leaving us helplessly hurt and destitute. The choice is ours; we can either be a destroyer or a builder!  

 How to Deal with Anger.pdf 

http://70030.inspyred.com/images/How%20to%20Deal%20with%20Anger.pdf

 

  

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The Pastor’s Prayer Approach

Here is a plan for prayer for a pastor. When I have made this a priority my ministry has flourished; when I forget or place it on the back burner, I am stressed and inefficient and ineffective! We must see prayer as the real, hard work of our ministry that unleashes the power of God in us and through us unto others. We must take a “three-prong” attack position to guard and activate the pastor. 

  • Prayer Attack 1: The pastor’s daily prayer and devotional life must be rich and growing.

We must make prayer a priority. Rearrange schedules, make the time, have others you trust keep you accountable, do what it takes to be in prayer and do so with joy, gratitude, and sincerity. Embrace and apply the other disciplines of the Christian faith and life such as fasting and mediation. Yes, there are dry spells, but the effort must be there as well as the passion. Our communication with our Lord Jesus Christ is based on the giving of everything and ourselves, because we see that he has first done so to us. We serve Him. He is our Lord, and we need to live, work, and respond accordingly. So, if the pastor is writing a sermon, he or she must pray before doing the research and writing, during the writing, and even while giving it. And this template applies to all we say and do.  

  • Prayer Attack 2: Establish lay prayer teams. Their primary task is to keep the pastor in prayer on a continual daily basis and meet at least once a week as a team. Again, not popcorn prayers but surrendered, deep pursuits before our holy God.
  • Attack 3: Have teams pray for specific ministries in which the pastor is involved, as we already discussed. I encourage you to have different prayer teams so not just the same people are doing it and perhaps becoming burned out.  

We are facing a war, all out attacks, conflicts, and the spread of malicious diseases coming to outflank us, many from our own church. We will lose because we are too busy fighting the good fight. Do not allow the church to put so many demands on you that you can not do what is important. Sit down with your elders and key people and explain to them what is most important in a powerful ministry and that you need their help to do it. Teach them that prayer is the highest call and duty and you need their prayers and partnership to make this work. If we are too busy or feel it is not important or are embarrassed, then Satan and manipulative people with skewed agendas will run you over and out. We must have the upper hand and the higher ground for a strong defense and offense. And, that means to be in His Word, be guided by the Holy Spirit, and be in effectual and continual prayer. We need to have vitality in our ministry and not aridness. What we need is Christ; what Christ wants is us. 

So then, just as you received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live in him, rooted and built up in him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness. Colossians 2:6-7

 Prayer is something you do not take breaks from, as you do not take breaks from oxygen, food, and water. Prayer is our lifeline and nutrient center in which we can grow and flourish. If we become thoughtless and careless with our prayer life, we will be careless and thoughtless to those around us. Our spiritual priorities are our life priorities. Do not neglect your prayer just as our Lord does not neglect us. And, make sure your communication with Him is two-way; be a listener too. Let us go before His presence, with the aspects we talked about, with confidence and the authority He gives us. Then, we can be the people of His work and will, and with gratitude and praise.  

Never leave your house to be in God’s house without feeding your soul!  

Remember: Amen is not the end or the close of a prayer; it rather means “so be it,” that we apply it to our life and not just say it. Amen is not an end to what we do and say, but our beginning to apply God’s truth to our lives with vigilance.  

“Real ministry is made in the closet of prayer.” E. M. Bounds 

(c) Rev. R.J. Krejcir Ph.D. 1987, 1998, 2007 excerpt from the upcoming book ‘Pew Sitting’ www.intothyword.org

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“Pray More!”

Do you feel vital for ministry? If not, what is in the way, or what are you not doing?  

            As a church growth consultant, the first words I hear out of people’s mouths when I come to a church are “what can we do to grow?” or How do I solve this particular problem or conflict?” I always reply, “Pray more!” Then, I almost always see a disappointed look, as if they were looking for something more propound and meaningful to come from me. But, there is nothing more profound or meaningful than prayer (outside our salvation in Christ of course)! There is nothing more significant or momentous a pastor or church can do on their part than to be more centered on Christ. And, we do this best when we are in communication with Him, so we can be healthy and growing. Prayer is the ultimate change agent God uses to impact us with His Spirit and Truth! Then, we can be impacting upon others with synergy.  

I was praying with another pastor over my meal in a restaurant a few years ago when another fellow pastor come up to us and said he felt it was out of place for us to do that. I felt puzzled and asked him what he meant; “he could not have meant prayer,” I thought. Then he went on to say how he felt insecure to pray for his meal in restaurants or any public place, so he does not, even with church members. He went on to say that he feels prayer is a private matter and should never be forced or exhibited. I asked him (as my fettuccini started to get cold) what he meant by “forced.” He replied, “By our example.” “You mean by saying grace?” I asked. I then rewarded his retort, saying, you are telling me as a pastor we should not ever pray in public? He said, “Yes!” “Wow,” I said. “I feel for you!” After a few moments of awkward silence I asked, “How is your church doing?” “Not so well.” he said. “Why?” I asked. “I can’t get people to serve on committees or give financially, and the attendance has been dropping.” He went on to say, “there are few people to draw from and most do not feel it is their role to participate in leadership of volunteering.” I then asked him how he models prayer to his congregation. He replied, “I feel, as I have said, that prayer is a private matter. Again, we have prayers in the service and a part of our liturgy, but that is all that is needed or done.” I looked at my cold fettuccini and asked him if he felt there was a correlation between his personal and his church’s prayer life and the spiritual activity in his church.” He said he was not sure and did not think this could be so. A few years later he was retired, and that church was closed. I will never forget my cold fettuccini—I mean the apathy of that pastor thinking prayer was inappropriate or not needed! 

That conversation started my venture into researching prayer trends for a former seminary professor of mine as well as my research for Into Thy Word and the Fuller Institute, then the Schaeffer Institute and my personal practice of prayer. I was seeking how prayer can impact churches. This then launched several books on that subject that I did the principle research for. After nearly 20 years since that first research was performed, I now realize even more that prayer in churches is one of the most crucial avenues for a healthy church to grow and be happy, productive, and give glory to Christ.

As prayer, hospitality, and solid Bible teaching are the three legs that hold up the church and give it the strong starting point and room for the Spirit to work and the Word to be proclaimed. This enables real effectual church growth; the people will feel at home and then be fed and then the community will be reached! Christ’s call for His Church!  

But, even with all the books, research, and movements on prayer—especially here in Pasadena, California, the hub of it all—I am amazed how little prayer is a part of American churches today. This saddens me greatly! This has even been a problem in my church. After prayer had been a very vital factor at the church in which I serve, it seemed to take a break or a backseat for a few years, only to resurface after several crises in the last two years. Now that prayer is back in vogue and in reality, I have seen significant health return to a church that was headed for failure. Prayer and its practice turned my church around. But, the sad fact is we should have never have let prayer become a second thought. It should always been first, front and centered, so we would be centered on Christ as LORD! 

Prayer is the big aspect that is missing from the pastor’s arsenal. Prayer is lacking in a big way from the hearts, minds, and studies of our nation’s pastors! Many think prayer is neither important nor a part of their job description. Many churches may want a praying pastor, but they add so much onto his plate, there is no room for it. Thus, we must realize and put into practice that prayer is the first line of defense and first responsibility of the pastor! Too many pastors feel they will lose their intellectual respect in the eyes of their peers and community if they are known as men of prayer! So what! We should not give attention to what others who are not spiritually mature think as long as our integrity and devotions and love for them are intact! Our peers and community are not the ones we are to worship, honor, or serve, and they certainly are not the ones who will judge us or hold us accountable! Remember Augustine’s call of “self watch.” This is being aware of what distracts and motivates us that do not come from God as well as what is best for us. Knowing our weaknesses will help us be on guard and then convey to people we trust to keep us accountable. This is essential. This will keep us from making mistakes and will keep the focus on the right track–God’s track. 

Our effectiveness as a pastor and the foundation that holds us up is prayer. The ministry starts and rests on the spiritual condition of the leaders, their devotion to Christ, and what flows from that devotion. For ministry to be blessed and effective, we must be in healthy relationships with our Lord and with one another in communication and accountability. We must not be independent to ourselves, but dependent on our Lord Jesus Christ and to one another. Christianity is not a solo sport or a spectator sport; it is a team, a community party where we are together as one body and one force for one Kingdom! 

If our schedule is too busy for prayer, how can we—especially pastors—be effective for His service? Remember, we cannot do the work of our Lord unless we are the people of our Lord. Our focus and concern must start with our spiritual condition—with our relationship with Christ. Before we can effectively minister to others, we must be growing. To begin to grow, we must fall on our knees. If this is not true of you and you are a pastor, quit and find yourself another job! Get right with God and then come back if called to do so. 

The pastor cannot have an effective ministry unless prayer is the focal point! We cannot meet the approval of God without prayer! How can we receive His blessings when we leave God out of the loop? If we never bother with God ourselves, then how can we serve Him and lead others in His direction? 

How we relate with others is a reflection of our relationship with God, regardless of if we are a leader, a new Christian, or a pew sitter. So, if we have a poor relationship with God, then our human, interpersonal relations will be diminished as well as shallow. When our relationship with our Lord is growing and built on prayer, then our relationships with one another will flourish too. This is a must for the Christian, essential for the leader, and extremely imperative for the pastor. Without this view of prayer, the Christian will be ineffective in his walk and castrated from being effectively used to further the Kingdom because God is out of the picture. Yes, He is sovereign, but throughout history God uses all kinds of people from all walks of life. To be our best, which we are called to do, and be of best use, which is imperative to the leader, we must be in prayer! Sovereignty is never an excuse to sit and do nothing, thinking God is in charge, and if He wills, it will be done. This is the ultimate slap in the face of our Lord, and is, in fact, denying His sovereignty, because we are denying our part in His call and plan! 

“Real ministry is made in the closet of prayer.” E. M. Bounds 

(c) Rev. R.J. Krejcir Ph.D. 1987, 1998, 2007 excerpt from the upcoming book ‘Pew Sitting’ www.intothyword.org

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The Hateful Jesus?

 

…that everyone who believes in him may have eternal life. “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.” John 3:15-17 

How do you feel when you see someone who claims to be a Christian and then who screams out hateful messages? A so called person from our faith who is full of anger and bitterness? Who may even be a pastor or leader and demonstrates at soldiers funerals or marches with signs and pronouncements of judgments upon those in lifestyles we may disagree with… 

Can’t you see this in the Bible? A book of hate speech right? Is our Lord odious? It must be this if a pastor of the faith of Jesus Christ can be so hateful… because, we are called to be intolerant, because…are we not to be His example and be like Him, as a Christian is to be… Christ-like?!  

One of the prominent themes of Jesus character is how He engages those who are in sin.  

So, allow me to continue to be facetious….Jesus must be the God-Man of odiousness, He must have done this too. You can see Jesus carefully and angrily write out placards of strong self-righteous hate speech, and then march around that person’s home and work and call out judgment upon them. Jesus must have done this, He must have said, God hates fags, God hates gays, God hates fornicators...you are going to hell! In fact, you can see how Jesus dealt with such a person in person, as He went to a woman in deep sin, who had many lovers and sexual liaisons and directly charged her with her sins, He told her she is dead and going to hell for God’s most severest judgment. He then publicly ridicules her and passionately chastises her with deep sanctimonious anger as He demonstrated at her village with His angry siege of signage!!!  

You can see all this in “First Bolognaians” chapter two, and all throughout Scripture especially if you never read the Bible and never seen or met Jesus Christ in His Word or know of His character. You can easy make up whatever you want Him to be and do, so you can go and do what you want to do. He can be the hateful, vengeful god from the deep rooted pride and self-importance contempt from our self-righteous idiots, our pious fraud and prim and proper hypocritical shameful pseudo-Christians who have a distaste and distain for Truth, ignore God’s vial call of Love and the Fruit of the Spirit and who do not know or follow The Real Jesus (see John cp 3-4)!  

Yes, the Bible condemns sin, and calls us to flee from sin and pursue Holiness as we all must! But, we are all sinners in the hands of an angry God who has been pleased by the Blood of Jesus who offers forgiveness and calls us to be Fruitful and model Christ’s character not model satan’s…. 

We are to be our best for His glory, regardless of our feelings. We show our significance and right—that Christ paid a price for us—so we in turn can respond with an attitude of goodness. We fight against sin by the example of real righteousness, so we must adjust our mindset to see our life here on earth as an opportunity to please Him not fulfill our hateful wishes, and in so doing, be a blessing to those around us with our practical love and diligence of real faith. 

We never get anywhere with condemnation and judgmentalism, we show Christ by the example of our Love; we showcase our faith by our goodness…. We lead others to His still waters by our example of His real disposition, not by our anger or by our pride! Remember, God hates sin and one of the sins He hates most is when we disrespect Him by our faulty view and applications of His precepts… Remember, Jesus models and calls us to fight sin and love our neighbor! Not be judgmental and hate our neighbor and ignore or propagate sin (see Psalm 1)!  

Matthew 7:6; John 7:24; Deut. 13:14; Acts 17:11,23-29; Rom. 1:16-25; 1 Thess. 5:21-22;   2 Tim. 2:15-19; 15; Titus 1:9, 1 Peter 3:15-16  

 

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Develop Real, Authentic Relationships!

 

Though I am free and belong to no man, I make myself a slave to everyone, to win as many as possible. 1 Corinthians 9:19

What is the key to the good, effective witness of Andrew and Philip, or of anyone else? It is prayer and the willingness and ability to develop relationships. It boggles my mind how many Christians I know who have no significant relationships, friends, or even acquaintances outside of the church. They only know other Christians; they shop in other Christian’s businesses so that they are in a sub-culture of a “Christian-only mindset,” even to the point of monasticism without the piety. This is a travesty. Yes, we are to have fellowship, and our principle relationships should be with people who are in Christ. There is nothing wrong with shopping at other Christian’s businesses. But, how can we be salt and light if we never go where the salt and light are needed? God does not call us to separate from others; in fact it is the opposite. We are to go to them without being contaminated by them. Scripture warns us that we are to be the influencers, not the ones being influenced.

Are you a maker and builder of friends? How so? Why not? This is not about being an extrovert or having the “personality” to do so. Yes, some are better at it than others, but we are all called to make friends. To be honest, I am not good in this area. I score high as an extrovert on those personality inventories, but that is because of my profession as a pastor. I tend to go out of my way to meet and greet people, but I am really a natural introvert. I have to work at this. I had to learn to be a “go getter” of people to make friends and befriend people. Perhaps you need to do so, too.

1. Be purposeful! To whom are you going? We need to have a target before we can aim the Gospel.

2. Be real! Caution! Be genuine; guard against only getting to know people so you can witness to them. Yes, that is a primary reason, but, we are called to be in relationships. If people find out you are only interested in proselytizing, your witness will be compromised.

3. Be excellent! Do not be a nuisance, especially at work. A good Christian always does his or her work with excellence and fortitude and does not use company time for Gospel time.

4. Be willing to take the time! We have to be willing to go where the people are, and spend the time with them. It may take years for a missionary on the field to learn the language, the culture, and build connections before he or she can be used effectively.

5. Be a friend winner! The purpose of witnessing is to offer people a relationship with Christ. This is best done when we have a relationship with them. We win them as friends before we win them to our Lord.

6. Be a smile maker! Smile at people. It takes seventy-two muscles to frown, but only fourteen to smile. People love a smile. Think about how you feel when someone smiles at you, and realize how important it is to do so to others, too.

7. Be a person who uses a person‘s name. Call people by name! This is critically important to build an effective relationship, take the time to remember someone’s name, and use it. The sweetest music to anyone’s ear is the sound of his or her own name.

8. Be engaging! Speak to people. Take the chance. Step up to that plate and beyond your fears to engage someone in dialog. Be willing to keep your friends close but also to go outside of your clique and comfort zone to talk to others. There is nothing as nice as a cheerful word or an honest, friendly greeting. You know it when you get a nice greeting, so why not give one to others?

9. Be friendly and helpful! Most people I have known and observed who have few or no friends do not make the effort to be a friend. If you would like to have friends, then be friendly.

10. Be caring! Be genuinely interested in people. Take the time to listen and show your care. Plan your schedule so you have time for people. If you are always in a rush, your relationships will suffer greatly. People whom God wants to bring to you will be ignored, thereby wasting the help, ministry, and influence you could have given. Christian empathy means involvement and showing that you care.

11. Be pleasant and cordial! Be a person who is nice and engaging to others. Speak and act as if another is the most important person in the room, and do so as if it is genuine pleasure, as it should be.

12. Be considerate with the feelings of others! It will be appreciated. Each person is unique, created and loved by God. Acknowledge this, and make your responses to others in this light.

13. Be thoughtful of the opinions of others. There are three sides to every controversy or disagreement—yours, that of the other person, and that of God, which is the right one. We must not rely on our own presumptions and assumptions, because we do not have all of the facts. Seek to know and understand the other person’s perspective, and start your dialog with those agreements.

14. Be an encourager! Be generous with praise! Seek to find something that person has done that is good—a personality trait, what they are wearing, or a smile that you noticed—and let them know. Be the person who takes the time to encourage others, but do so honestly. No one likes a pretentious pretender. Most people go through their day, some even surrounded by Christians, and they never receive encouragement. Be an encourager!

15. Be cautious with criticism! No one likes to be condescended to or put down. There are times we are to correct others or motivate them in a better direction, but we must do so with an attitude of love and care, showing patience, respect, and tact while being firm.

16. Be ready to give your witness! What counts most in life is who we are in Christ and then responding with our gratitude for what He has done for us by doing for others.

17. Make relationships outside of your Christian subculture that are real and authentic; be the salt and the light. It is always more about how you are rather than about what you say.

© 2006, Richard J. Krejcir, Ph.D. Schaeffer Institute of Church Leadership, www.churchleadership.org

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2010 in review

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

A helper monkey made this abstract painting, inspired by your stats.

A Boeing 747-400 passenger jet can hold 416 passengers. This blog was viewed about 2,000 times in 2010. That’s about 5 full 747s.

In 2010, there were 55 new posts, not bad for the first year! There were 15 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 5mb. That’s about a picture per month.

The busiest day of the year was November 2nd with 331 views. The most popular post that day was CONSERVATIVE VOTER GUIDE.

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were facebook.com, mail.yahoo.com, en.wordpress.com, acts29.org, and biblicaleschatology.org.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for frank pastore voting guide, concert of prayer, concert of prayer guide, ming w. chin conservative, and ming w chin conservative.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

CONSERVATIVE VOTER GUIDE October 2010
2 comments

2

Concert of Prayer August 2010

3

Sermons August 2010
1 comment

4

Understanding and Developing Christian Accountability August 2010

5

Are you a Doulos? September 2010

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A brief History of Inductive Bible Study

I have hidden your word in my heart that I might not sin against you. Psalm 119:11 

Inductive Bible Study System 

I was teaching at a conference this last weekend and it hit me, I have been doing this for quite a while, since I was in High School! I am looking back at doing Inductive Bible Study seminars, research and teaching for more than 30 years now! Wow!  

So, now you can have our basic seminar, and there is more in my Book: 

http://www.intothyword.org/pages.asp?pageid=56846(I need the $) 

The link at the bottom is the classic curriculum I developed in…wow 1978…to show how to better understand and study the Bible! Because, the obedience and faith is a trust relationship with our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ that we learn and grow from our efforts of getting into the Bible, seeking God’s counsel and applying His true-Truth and precepts to our lives and churches. And to do this we have to get into the Bible and to get into the Bible we have to know how to pull from it and not read into it. And for 30 years this also has been used to train tens of thousands of pastors on how to teach the Bible, prepare basic sermons and for them to know, grow and lead others to God’s rich pastures in the Word. 

For me, this started back in 1978 (I was 15), as a request to get my act together and do something important, from my uncle Francis Schaeffer. He told me, “…the most important thing you could ever possibly do it to teach people how to study the Bible, so they will know God’s true Truth.” “Why” I said, he replied, “because more people even pastors have no idea how to read a book let alone the Bible that is why there is so much bad teaching and apathy out there, so you must show them?” But I do not know how I said…Schaeffer replied, “find out…” Thus, I undertook this quest to examine and research the top Bible teachers and methods and see what they do, how they work, what does and what does not work. And with Schaeffer’s guidance this was not hard to do. I also examined the Scriptures and put this into practice and come up with the best honest technique to know and teach the Bible.  

When I developed our system, I was not aware of anyone else doing it. I just wanted a way to better read, understand and teach the Bible. I was dyslexic and had an over active mind and wanted more as well as ease of use and there just was nothing out there for me in the late 70’s that I could find. All I had was good mentors and Andrew Murray’s book, With Christ in the School of Prayer.  So I developed my own system seeking deeper spiritual intimacy with Christ. Being from a small town, Camel, Ca, and only one small Christian bookstore and being a part of a liberal Episcopal church, resources were rare. I was not even aware of others doing this like IVP until I was in college 1981, I went on staff with Camus Crusade in 83-86.  

I used the term “Inductive” because deductive meant to lead or read in and inductive meant to take out, from the sciences where I was taking postgraduate classes in Physics at the “Naval Post Graduate School” (I was one of those weird prodigy types). After I did my own basic Questions, Schaeffer then put me in touch with Ray Stedman, Chuck Miller and Robert Boyd Munger who were schooled by and served with IVP. These men further discipled me in this, and I sought to improve upon it. Who were influenced personally by Howard Tillman Kuist and Charles T. Haley Professors of Biblical Theology at Princeton Theological Seminary and of course Jane Hollingsworth and Barbara Boyd, in the 40’s and 50’s at IVP. From what I heard from Munger and Miller, they took the works done by Wilbert Webster White in 1899 “knowledge of the Bible” and they developed a curriculum they developed for YMCA too, and being very active with the Y in my youth I was exposed to it there too. These men and women enhanced the Inductive bible study system, all I have done was refine it for different platforms and combined some exegetical tools to it for greater synergy. I also learned this from many others and have been developing and teaching and refining it for Junior Higher’s to pastors…  

…And it is nothing new, I found out Plato used these same key inductive questions to examine life, religion and philosophy, and Francis Beacon may have coined the term “Inductive” Logic, And so it goes, since the Disco age to today, still loving it!  

I had a pastor come up to be yesterday at that conference and insist that Kay Author came up with this and it is flawed and does not teach anything and only pools ignorance. Well, I know Kay, and she is a great person, but no, she did not come up with it, nor did I. I explained that The Inductive Bible Study method is not new, it has its roots in science and the logic of induction as well as the Reformation and even predates the New Testament. It is meant to examine the facts by observation, then interpretation, retesting for accuracy and then an application.  

It is designed to get real effectual information from reality and real truth and not lead in a person’s flawed rationale. Aristotle came up with this scientific method to show real philosophy and science and it was old when he came up with his “rules for the logical reasoning”. Others like Galileo, who was a devout believer, applied it to his Bible reading, as he said that faith and reason go together and back each other up, and then used it for astronomy. Augustine also said that, and used this approach to his studies. And Isaac Newton  in his “Rules of Reasoning” also used this method and he too was a devote Believer and went to test it out on the Bible first and foremost. Roger Bacon, around 1256, of a devout Franciscan Order came up with a cycle of observation, hypothesis, experimentation, and verification. He conducted his experiments in precise detail, examining the Bible and then nature and order with the ideas of finding fact not inserting flaws of reasoning into science or into faith. And many others like René Descartes used this and of course John Calvin in his Bible discovery phase, 1536–1538, used these insights and rules of inductive reasoning to outline out the true doctrines of the faith and continue the Reformation.  

This begs the question, why are we as a Christian community not thinking hard about God’s Word as they of old? Why do we deny reading “from” the Bible and insist reading “into” the Bible? Instead of gleaning and applying what God has to say, we read in what we want it to say! We have more tools and reason, so let’s get busy and dig into God’s Most precious pasture land, His Word the Bible!  BTW, I Googled that pastor and he is, you guessed it, liberal, a low view of the Bible and his church has no Bible studies or outreach and looks dead as a doornail…go figure..I guess he had a good excuse, in his mind, to not to know the Word and do as we are called… well a bad excuse in reality!  

http://files.inspyred.com/webfiles/70030/Essential%20Inductive%20Questions.pdf 

http://70030.netministry.com/pages.asp?pageid=53489 

http://70030.netministry.com/articles_view.asp?articleid=66163&columnid=3801 

http://www.amazon.com/dp/0595148735?tag=intothywordmi-20&camp=14573&creative=327641&linkCode=as1&creativeASIN=0595148735&adid=1SWF32B5A4SPVCY3XH45&

http://70030.netministry.com/articles_view.asp?articleid=66163&columnid=3801

 

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Got Discipline?

Jesus Helps in our Struggle of Faith!  

Psalm 25; Hebrews 12:4-13 

Here are a couple of questions to ponder upon and go to our Lord with in your quite time: Why do many Christians fear or avoid discipline? How would you describe discipline in its ability to show what God is doing and what He can do in your life? 

To illustrate this point, there is a popular mindset floating around in the church today, mostly among the young people, that all we have to do to live out the Christian life and faith is receive Christ and we then have all that we need. There is no need to be disciplined or be discipled because the complete Christian life abides in “me.” Thus, once someone accepts Christ as Savior, his or her thinking is that I have all the resources to live out the Christian life. While, others feel it this growth in faith and the role of discipline is an unobtainable goal to walk the Christian life, so why bother.  

Both views believe that there is no real need to be in a Bible study or read the Word or have devotions or read good Christian literature, or have a mentor or be a mentor because I have nothing lacking and I do not need anyone to point out what I may be deficient in, for I am self-sufficient. Christ dwells in me and is able to pull anything out He needs from me from within me. If you think I am out to lunch on this, just count how many people are in Bible studies or some kind of discipleship group here in this church verses the number who come for worship services?  

Now, if this doesn’t cause you to bite your tongue or shutter, something may be wrong with you too.

Yes, we all need to be saved by “Faith Alone,” but our faith does not stand alone.

To grow in Christ, we need His Word, and we need to learn, just as this passage in Hebrews points out. We have to realize that it is indeed our responsibility to receive our faith and then maintain and grow our faith to live an effective, triumphant Christian life. And yes, we are given all we need, but we have to learn, know, and then apply it into our lives. If we do not, we will falter greatly in life and in the faith. Do not take my word for it; read Psalm 25 again and this passage in Hebrews, or any of the Gospels and Epistles!  

Q: What are some distractions and bad thinking that can get in your way of growing in Christ?

Let me tell you about what was going on when this Epistle to the Hebrews was written. Remember, it was a letter to a church in turmoil, like many of us here today! Many wealthy Romans had illegitimate children for whom they were obligated to provide, for they were citizens too. However, they rarely trained, schooled, or disciplined them. Thus, these children grew up to be hoodlums, troublemakers, and the dregs of society. They had some wealth, power, and position, but carelessness, a lack of character, and apathy or lawlessness created extreme dysfunction and this greatly contributed to the breakdown of the Roman Empire civilization, just as it is doing today with our young people who lack love, hope, parental involvement, or discipline. In contrast, the Roman legitimate sons received the privilege of the finest schools and discipline, and carried the family name and received most of the inheritance. Keep in mind when we are in Christ, we are God’s legitimate children; He loves us and wants us to receive His best and carry His name (1 John 4; 5:2)!  

Discipline is our catalog or database for what God is doing and what He can do in our lives. It is a vehicle to the quality and result of our spiritual formation. This is not about being punished for being disobedient; rather, it is a call to be trained like an athlete being made ready for the game or as a child receiving nurture and correction to be a better person and to prepare for adulthood as a person and Christian. We can’t enter the race of life and faith without preparation through diligence, obedience, and submission. This is something we are to embrace and love, not fear or try to get out of. Our goal is to know and then serve Christ; it takes honest, hard work. Remember that God nurtures and encourages us and we should also welcome His discipline, for that helps us too. Just as a loving parent corrects a child and helps him or her on the path for betterment and future, so God does with us. Even though we do not like the discipline, it is best for us. Therefore, we have no reason to feel discouraged; rather, we can endure for His glory. So get a grip on life and faith—with your main grip on Christ as Lord. He will help you go in the right way—His way—and not flounder.  

Q: What does it mean to you that you are not alone in this journey of faith and life? 

Let look at the Hebrews passage with Bibles open,  

Look at this key word, Your struggle against sin. This is a call not to compromise God’s truths for our convenience or pleasure. We have to be prepared for what is ahead in life, just like preparing for an athletic event. In context, it is a call to be prepared for things to worsen and for more persecution. This was an athletic term referring to boxing and the strain on the body; here, it is referring to martyrdom. Keep in mind at this time, none of these original hearers had experienced this yet. The words were meant to convey, you think times are tough now? You have no idea of what is ahead, what others have faced, or what our Lord faced for you. So you better get ready so you can endure it (Mark 8:34-38; Heb. 10:32-34; 11:35-38).  

Now we have a quote from Proverbs 3:11-12—a call to accept discipline and repent of sins. God does not intend to hurt. He wants to mold and shape us so we can prosper for the faith no matter what life throws at us. This is God’s concern and love for us. An uncaring or vengeful God could care less (Deut. 8:5; Psalm 94:12; Prov. 3:11-18).  

Do you know this, you are God’s, you belong to Him! As sons. We are in God’s care no matter what happens. His discipline is the proof of His love. It is God’s intent, plan, and purpose to lead us further in Him to learn faith and maturity. If necessary, He will use suffering to do so, which is valuable for our benefit. Thus, since Christ and godly others have suffered to gain perfection of their spiritual formation, we should not think of ourselves better or more deserving not to suffer. This also goes to our attitude to put the work in for our spiritual growth.  

So as His son He rightly and righteously corrects us and we should expect and accept this! The Lord disciplines/chastening. Referring to the training of a child to learn to correct faults so to develop well for their future benefit and the benefit of society. As we grow in Christ, we prosper in the faith and handle life better; others are positively affected and God is glorified. Thus, when we go through tough times, we have the opportunity to see how God’s Son suffered for us. His example of fortitude will enable us to learn and grow and produce a deeper relationship with God, yielding more faith and fruit (Psalm 119:67-71).  

Now we are at this word that no one likes: Discipline. This means moral instruction, not corporal punishment. Here, it means education and the learning we gain by corrective and instructive training to know and grow. This comes from Christ and from what we have before us, as we partake of His Word so we can contextualize it to our lives to grow and mature. God’s discipline is always temporary to get us lined up to what is important. If he did not do this, we would certainly fall into a worse situation. God’s good discipline is always done in love; to those who are wicked and refuse to repent, the discipline is severe and eternal.  

So, if we do not look to Christ, if we are not disciplined at least to some faithful extent what are we: we are Illegitimate/bastard. Ouch! This meant out of wedlock and an extreme insult, hence the KJV rendering. When we ignore God, we insult Him. How would God give us our inheritance and blessing when it should go to the legitimate one, the one who is grateful and honors his Father (Gal. 4:1-2).  

Now we have a precious Name of God here to give us comfort after that ouch, Father/Lord of our spirits. This is a name of God that means He is our Father, who is perfect in contrast to earthly fathers who are to follow this role but who are not perfect. This is a theme of nurture, care, instruction, and correction in love and care. This is also a call to respect God and follow Him as we are to do with our earthly Father; what is more important than this for our Heavenly Lord Father (Ex. 4:22; 1 Pet. 1:15-16)?  

So here we have it, our God disciplines. God’s desire is to make us holy and righteous. His wisdom and help are accessible and available to us; we have only to reach out for it. He gives, but it is up to us to put it in our lives and work it out (Phil 2:12-14; 1 Pet. 1:15-16). For a….. Harvest of righteousness. So that Christ’s holiness is our example and at our hand, BUT, yet- This involves our efforts to put it to use.  

Now we have one of Paul’s famous athletic terms, some evidence that if he did not write this; his fingerprints and DNA are all over it…. Trained. Meaning physical strength training, referring to our spiritual growth. These efforts that are required to do anything grand or great, such as a high level athlete, also apply to pursuing the holiness of God. Thus, our relationship with Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit gives us the ability to enter. Our continual discipleship and mentorship as well as persistent spiritual growth will give us the endurance and strength to maintain, finish, and even win the race of life. Faith comes by the efforts we put in and the hurdles we leap over that build us up even stronger and better. Any athletic injury may sideline a sportsman, but for a Christian, it will propel us even farther and faster. The key is our ability to heal, overcome our hurts and setbacks, leap over our obstacles, and avoid the pitfalls that may be ahead such as sin and bad choices.  

And another Paul print … Feeble/drooping arms and weak knees. This is a warning about slacking off and not putting in the effort to do what God has called or what is right. This is apathy and laziness and God hates this attitude of I don’t care! It shows that we care nothing about others, ministry, spiritual growth, or what God wants of us. It is the misconception or misapplication of the magnitude of His incredible gifts and His grace to us. And, as a result, we become lukewarm, disinterested, and non-committal! This is not about rest and vacations or taking a break. This is a life of purposeless and laziness that leads to rebellion and produces no faith, fruit, or righteousness (Isa. 13:7; 35:3-4; Jer. 47:3; 50:43; Ezek. 7: 17; 21:7; Hosea 13:6; Zeph. 3:16; Matt. 13:25-26; Rom. 13; Eph. 1:13-14; Heb. 3:13; James 5:11-20; 1 John 4: 7-8; Rev. 3:1-6; 14-18).  

And here is another, · Level paths for your feet. Meaning to pursue righteousness with upright character and conduct. This is a call to be educated and put into practice what you learn from putting in the time to study and grow to make this so. This also means to choose the best path like a runner looking for the best path; this was very important before good shoes were invented. Train as a good athlete does; if you do not, you are foolish and do not care about God’s call and precepts (Prov. 4:25-27)!  

So what does this come down to my daily grind?  

It is natural for us, as human beings, to cringe at discipline, because of our sinful nature. Obedience and follow-through attack our self-importance and will. We tend to object to being contorted into an image we may perceive as too hard or might require too much time and effort. It is far easier to do what we want, when we want—to be lazy and even apathetic as we see others do it and get away with it. Yet, discipline is the tool that helps us become better. It requires effort and diligence, so the work we put in is worth what we gain, and what we build is beneficial to us and those around us. Not putting in the effort is like being on a sports team, receiving the jersey for our sport and then thinking this is all we need to compete. We are on the team; we have the letterman jacket, so we must be fit and ready and thus need no further activity or action. This should sound ridiculous, yet many Christians see their faith as such. Yes, it is natural to put forth no effort, yet it is sinful.  

Q: How can you better welcome both God’s nurture and discipline? What do you need to do better in regard to your honest, hard work of faith and discipline? 

Discipline is the effort and training we do with what Christ gives us. It is Him in action in our lives. So, allow Him to exercise His fullness for your fullness in Him. This is the faith on our part needed to be self-disciplined with spiritual fitness that builds us and His Kingdom up and gives Christ the Glory!  

Let us pray!  

Small Group Discussion Questions:  

  1. 1.    Why is discipline seen as a negative or as punishment for being disobedient? How have you seen it and why?
  1. 2.    Why do we need nurture and correction to be better Christian persons? Why would some people say no to this?
  1. 3.    God nurtures and encourages us. So, how and why should we also welcome His discipline? How can you live in response with gratitude?
  1. 4.    What are some distractions and bad thinking that can get in your way of growing in Christ?
  1. 5.    What happens when we think we deserve everything now and do not need to work for it, desiring immediate gratification in life and in faith?

 

  1. 6.    Why would someone who claims to be a Christian feel that they would not need to be discipled? Or feel they do not have the time? Why would you say to someone who thinks it is an unobtainable goal to walk the Christian life, so why bother?

 

  1. 7.    Why can’t we endure the race of life and faith without putting in the necessary diligence, obedience, and submission? Why would some Christians think otherwise?

 

  1. 8.    Are you able to throw off whatever hinders and slows you down? If not, what do you need to do to remove your sins so you can run and even win the race of life and faith?

 

  1. 9.    How can you better welcome both God’s nurture and discipline? What do you need to do better in regard to your honest, hard work of faith and discipline?

 © 2008 R. J. Krejcir Ph.D. Into Thy Word Ministries www.intothyword.org/

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