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Seek and Ye Shall be Surprised [Excerpt]

Yesterday Mark Batterson shared his experience with trying to Force a Miracle. Here’s the story’s unexpected conclusion — a real-life example of “seek and ye shall find,” and how the finding will often surprise … ye!

I love how this story hints that God is directing the scene, but Mark and his unnamed friends have their roles to play. That is exciting, because it’s true in our stories too!

This story is from Mark Batterson’s book The Circle Maker: Praying Circles Around Your Biggest Dreams and Greatest Fears.

-Adam Forrest, Zondervan

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It’s Like Watching Jesus Drive a Shuttle Bus (AKA, Flourishing in Action – Excerpt)

Does God want his people to flourish? What does flourishing even look like? John Ortberg gives us a picture in this excerpt from The Me I Want to Be: Becoming God’s Best Version of You.

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Not long ago I boarded an airport shuttle bus to get to the rental car lot. Driving a shuttle bus is usually a thankless job, for the driver is often regarded as the low man on the totem pole. People on the bus are often grumpy from travel and in a hurry to get to their car. No one says much except the name of their rental car company. But not on this bus.

The man who drove the bus was an absolute delight. He was scanning the curbside, looking for anybody who needed a ride. “You know,” he told us, “I’m always looking because sometimes people are running late. You can tell it in their eyes. I’m always looking because I never want to miss one. Hey, here’s another one! …”

The driver pulled over to pick up a latecomer, and he was so excited about what he was doing that we got excited. We were actually cheering him on when he was picking people up. It was like watching Jesus drive a shuttle bus. The man would grab people’s luggage before they could lift it, then he would jump back on the bus and say, “Well we’re off. I know you’re all eager to get there as quickly as possible, so I’m going to get you there as soon as I can.”

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The Weight of Your Past (and What Jesus Thinks about It – Excerpt)

We begin our scene at Jacob’s well, as two people discuss what God desires. One of those people is the Son of God. This story is told by Mark Buchanan in his book Your Church Is Too Safe: Why Following Christ Turns the World Upside-Down. -Adam Forrest, Zondervan

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“Will you give me a drink?” Jesus asks.

The voice, the question, the man: they startle her. They startle her out of her silence and avoidance.

“You are a Jew and I am a Samaritan woman. How can you ask me for a drink?” [See John 4:1-42]

And then unfolds a remarkable encounter, a life-turning exchange. But not at first. At first, her speech is as cagey as her silence, a series of diversions and evasions. Jesus offers her living water, “the gift of God.” She’s puzzled and intrigued, but when Jesus exposes her condition, she scurries down a rabbit trail. She wants to talk about worship. That might be a good thing, but as so often happens with talk of worship, it bogs down quickly into hairsplitting and argument baiting. Is this style better than that style? Is old better than new? Is tradition better than innovation?

When Jesus exposes her condition, she scurries down a rabbit trail.

Jesus cuts through all that with a clear word about the heart of worship: it’s about the heart in worship. It’s about a heart that longs for God and seeks him wherever he might be found. It’s about a heart that wants truth in the inmost parts, and opens itself wide as a bird’s mouth to receive it, and steeps in it until it works its way to the outermost parts. Worship is not about a style or a form or a place. That’s not what God’s seeking. He’s seeking not a kind of music or liturgy or architecture but a kind of person: humble, hungry, wide awake, who comes in spirit and truth, bold and beseeching both, ready to live toward God out of their depths.

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A Little Bit of Bad Stuff [Excerpt]

What we choose to swallow matters, as made mighty clear in this story from Craig Groeschel’s book Soul Detox: Clean Living in a Contaminated World. (Did you guess how this story ends?)

When it comes to anything we consume, a little bit of poison goes a long way…

Here’s the best illustration that I know of this timeless truth. A loving mother demonstrated this principle to her son, Cade. When his friends invited him over to watch a movie, one just released on DVD and rated PG-13, Cade begged his mom to let him see it. His mom asked him her usual questions, “Buddy, is it a good movie? One that won’t hurt your Christian walk?”

Knowing it had some less than appropriate scenes, Cade shuffled from one foot to the other and searched for the right words. Not wanting to lie to his mom, he tried to walk on the edge of the truth. “Well, it’s not as bad as a lot of movies,” he said enthusiastically. “And all my friends have seen it. There’s only a little bit of bad stuff in it.” He held his breath, awaiting his mom’s final verdict on his moviegoing fate.

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Bitterness Never Works Alone [Excerpt by Craig Groeschel]

 

Excerpt from Craig Groeschel's Soul Detox: Clean Living in a Contaminated World.

 

Like a master criminal needing support for a big heist, bitterness never works alone. Its insidious partners include jealousy, anger, hatred, disobedience, contempt, gossip, rage, and countless other tag-alongs. The job they're planning is to rob anyone they can of peace, hope, joy, forgiveness, and mercy. Instead of just inflicting one cut on our souls, bitterness and its gang litter our spiritual path with layers of crushed glass, leaving us to bleed a slow, agonizing death of resentful rage.

God's Word shows us clearly the dangers of bitterness: "Make every effort to live in peace with everyone and to be holy; without holiness no one will see the Lord. See to it that no one falls short of the grace of God and that no bitter root grows up to cause trouble and defile many" (Heb. 12:14–15, emphasis mine). Though we can't control the outcome, we're called to do everything possible to live at peace with others, even those — or especially those — who have hurt us. The problem is that when you're filled with bitterness, as I was with Max [who molested my sister], you don't want to believe this verse applies to your situation — but it does. The writer to the Hebrews warns us to be on guard for the root of bitterness.

 

[The Root of Bitterness]

We must watch for it and do everything possible to fight against it. If we're not careful, if we allow bitterness to take root in our lives, then we might miss God's grace in our lives. Why? Because the root of bitterness defiles and poisons.

 

Bitterness works underground, slithering beneath the surface. No one can see the poison coursing through your veins. On the outside you might look normal. You can fool others for a while. But on the inside, our bitterness starts to boil. "I can't believe she did that to me. I wouldn't treat my worst enemy that way." "I am so angry I could kill someone. He's going to pay for this, one way or another."

 

Over time, our bitterness poisons our hearts. "I wouldn't be surprised if something really bad happens to him. He deserves it, you know." "If I ever see her, there is no telling what I might do." "I pray that God gives him what he really deserves." …

The more I meditated on Max's actions to my sister, the more polluted and contaminated my soul became. I became obsessed with making sure he paid for his wrongdoings. And guess whom my bitterness hurt the most? Me…

 

A little bitterness goes a long way. Add a little bitterness to any environment and watch it suffer… Bitterness never produces good results.

 

[How to Kill Bitterness]

The only way to remove bitterness from your life is to kill it at its root. And there is only one way to kill the root of bitterness: with forgiveness. Ephesians 4:31–32 says, "Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice. Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you" (emphasis mine)…

 

I remember arguing with God. "How can I forgive someone who did something so horrible? I don't want to forgive. Max deserves to pay." Though the memories of Max's abuse continued to haunt me, so did Christ's command to forgive…

 

Over time and after lots of prayer, I finally surrendered to the idea that forgiving the man who'd hurt my sister was the right and biblical thing to do. Even though I knew it was right, that didn't make it any easier.

 

I started by trying to pray for Max. You'd think that praying for someone else would never be hard. I don't know if I've ever done anything more difficult. "Bless Max," I prayed half-heartedly, not meaning one of the two words I prayed. That was a start.

 

Your prayers for others may or may not change them, but they always change you.

I've found that your prayers for others may or may not change them, but they always change you. As I tried sincerely to pray for a betrayer, slowly my bitter root started to die. To be honest, I don't think I even noticed it at first. But the poison that I'd been allowing into my heart started to subside.

- Craig Groeschel

 

Learn More about Beyond Boundaries Learn More

Learn more about Soul Detox: Clean Living in a Contaminated World.

 

Suggested Posts

How to Deal with Toxic Words via Craig Groeschel
A Prayer Against Anger via The Book of Common Prayer
How to Forgive When It's Hard by the Zondervan Blog Team

 

(Some styling above is web-exclusive and not included in the text of Soul Detox.This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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How Sorrow Prepares You for Joy [A Lent Excerpt by Walt Wangerin, Jr.]

 

Excerpt from Walt Wangerin, Jr.’s Reliving the Passion: Meditations on the Suffering, Death, & the Resurrection of Jesus as Recorded in Mark (eBook).


[Why Happiness Disappoints, but Joy Does Not]

["You will grieve, but your grief will turn to joy. A woman giving birth to a child has pain because her time has come; but when her baby is born she forgets the anguish because of her joy that a child is born into the world. So with you: Now is your time of grief, but I will see you again and you will rejoice, and no one will take away your joy." John 16:20b-22

"On the evening of that first day of the week, when the disciples were together, with the doors locked for fear of the Jewish leaders, Jesus came and stood among them and said, "Peace be with you!" After he said this, he showed them his hands and side. The disciples were overjoyed when they saw the Lord." John 20:19b-20]

 

Joy… rises from sorrow and therefore can withstand all grief.

The difference between shallow happiness and a deep, sustaining joy is sorrow. Happiness lives where sorrow is not. When sorrow arrives, happiness dies. It can’t stand pain. Joy, on the other hand, rises from sorrow and therefore can withstand all grief. Joy, by the grace of God, is the transfiguration of suffering into endurance, and of endurance into character, and of character into hope – and the hope that has become our joy does not (as happiness must for those who depend upon it) disappoint us.

In the sorrows of the Christ – as we ourselves experience them – we prepare for Easter, for joy. There can be no resurrection from the dead except first there is a death! But then, because we love him above all things, his rising is our joy. And then the certain hope of our own resurrection warrants the joy both now and forever.


[Become One of the First Disciples for a Moment]

And in that skin, consider: what makes the appearance of the resurrected Lord such a transport of joy for you? Consider this in every fiber of your created being. How is it that so durable a joy is born at this encounter? – joy that shall hereafter survive threats and dangers and persecutions, confusions and death, even your own death?

 

Jesus appears to the disciples

Jesus appears to the disciples. From “The Incredulity of Saint Thomas” by Caravaggio (1571-1610).

 

Well, Jesus has been dead. Now he is alive. No one expects the dead to live. This causes a speechless astonishment. Is this also joy?

 

Well, the one whom you loved is here! Your beloved is back, Hooray! This is “gladness.” This is delight and “peace,” and gratitude. But is it also joy?

 

At his appearing, the Son of God has just kept the hardest of all his promises… This is marvelous affirmation…

Well… at his appearing, the Son of God has just kept the hardest of all his promises: he rose from the dead, exactly as he said. This is marvelous affirmation, the absolute guarantee that he shall keep to every other promise, from salvation to the sending of the Spirit to the raising of the dead. This is bright, sustaining assurance of faith. Is it also joy?

What causes joy?

This: not just that the Lord was dead, but that you grieved his death. That, for three days, you yourself did suffer his absence, and then the whole world was for you a hollow horror… You experienced, you actually believed, that the end of Jesus was the end of everything…


In the economy of God, what seems the end is but a preparation.

But in the economy of God, what seems the end is but a preparation. For it is, now … that the dear Lord Jesus Christ appears – not only an astonishment, gladness and affirmation, but joy indeed!

It is the experience of genuine grief that prepares for joy…


[View the Resurrection from the Disciples' Direction]

The disciples approached the Resurrection from their bereavement. For them the death was first, and the death was all. Easter, then, was an explosion of newness, a marvelous splitting of heaven indeed. But for us, who return backward into the past, the Resurrection comes first, and through it we view a death which is, therefore, less consuming, less horrible, even less real. We miss the disciples’ terrible, wonderful preparation.

Unless, as now, we attend to the suffering first, to the cross with the sincerest pity and vigilant love, to the dying with most faithful care – and thus prepare for joy.

Jesus, come again! You need never suffer again. That was done once and for all. But come and remind me of the suffering, so that I recall and regain the purer joy of your rising after all. Amen.

- Walt Wangerin, Jr.


Learn More about Beyond Boundaries Learn More

Learn more about Reliving the Passion eBook.

 

 

Other Suggested Posts

A Roadmap for Jesus Followers, excerpt by Walt Wangerin, Jr.
On Ash Wednesday: Remember the Dust, excerpt by Walt Wangerin, Jr.

 

(Image and some styling above are web-exclusive features not included in the text of Reliving the Passion. Image attribution: Caravaggio, Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer’s personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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A Roadmap for Jesus Followers, Galilee to Golgotha [Excerpt by Walt Wangerin, Jr.]

 

Excerpt from Reliving the Passion: Meditations on the Suffering, Death, & the Resurrection of Jesus as Recorded in Mark (eBook) by Walt Wangerin, Jr.

 

Going to "Galilee"

Near the beginning and then near the end of Jesus' passion… the same promise is repeated…


I will go (he is going) before you to Galilee
[Mark 14:27-28 & Mark 16:6-7]. That promise is both a call and a consolation.

Surely it's meant to be factual: the disciples will in fact meet the resurrected Lord in Galilee. But…

 

Since Mark is writing his Gospel for disciples of another time and another place (Christians persecuted in Rome in the latter half of the first century, people who would never see a geographic Galilee)… there may lurk another, deeper meaning in the word [Galilee]…

 

In "Galilee" his enemies appeared and criticized him even for healing and doing good.

In "Galilee" his enemies appeared and criticized him even for healing and doing good. From this "Galilee" Jesus' itinerary was south to Judah, up to Jerusalem, where enmity hardened into persecution, up Golgotha even to the cross. Jesus' person "going," then, was a trip through suffering and death to resurrection.

 

If Jesus "will go before" his disciples from Galilee as he had gone before, then this is a call to follow him down the hard road of conflict, criticism, enmity, persecution, suffering and death and resurrection. So the passion story becomes a roadmap for all of Jesus' followers (who deny themselves and take up their crosses) whether Christians martyred in the first, or Christians bold in the twentieth, centuries.

 

Jesus' Passion - a roadmap for Christians

"The passion story [of self-denial, death, and resurrection] becomes a roadmap for all of Jesus' followers…"

Read [the story of Christ's Passion], then, as a detailed itinerary of the disciple's life.

 

He, in 'going before us,' is always near us, however hard the persecution.

But hear in it as well the constant consolation – not only that he, in "going before us," is always near us, however hard the persecution; but also that we, in going his way to Galilee, will see him as he told you. The dearest comfort in this promise is that precisely by taking the Way of the Lord, we will meet the Lord himself. In suffering is he revealed! In the experience of our own crosses is he made manifest. Exactly so were the Christian Romans consoled by Mark’s Good News – the story of Jesus. Exactly so ourselves, in our more distant deserts…

From Galilee to Golgotha: first we study the map, the Passion; and then – actually traveling the passionate path ourselves, "going" even as we were called – we will see him too, just as he promised we would. 


Master, grant me, in the study of your story, both love and faith. Love will make me attentive to all you do. Faith will make me bold to follow you. I beg to see you, O my Savior! Amen.

- Walt Wangerin, Jr.


Learn More about Beyond Boundaries Learn More

Learn more about Reliving the Passion eBook.

 

 

Other Suggested Posts

On Ash Wednesday: Remember the Dust, excerpt by Walt Wangerin, Jr.
Tough Love: Jesus and 1 Corinthians, excerpt by Craig Blomberg

 

Image and some styling above are web-exclusive features not included in the text of Reliving the Passion. Image attribution: googlemaps.com. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Merry Christmas, Uncle Scrooge: 4 Books on Finding Joy

 

If I could work my will… every idiot who goes about with ‘Merry Christmas’ on his lips should be boiled with his own pudding.
-Ebenezer Scrooge, in A Christmas Carol

Do you have an Uncle Scrooge inside of you? I do. My Uncle Scrooge is the part of me that’s boiling in my own bitter pudding.


If times are tough for Uncle Scrooge — and they usually are, since Uncle Scrooge holds on to grudges and disappointments — then Scrooge doesn’t want anyone else to be happy. Rejoicing just reminds the Scrooge inside me how little joy I’m feeling.


So, do you have an Uncle Scrooge too? If so, we can do something for him.


You may recall it took four ghosts in Dickens’ A Christmas Carol to wake that Scrooge up to reality, to show him he didn’t have to live in bondage to the disappointments and mistakes of his past. While I don’t know four ghosts, I can offer us the next best thing: books.


These four biblically-based books have helped me reclaim the joy that Jesus offers. May these books help you pursue a life full of the Fruit of the Spirit, and not least of those, joy.  -Adam Forrest, Zondervan

 

Birthright

1. The Birthright by John Sheasby with Ken Gire

Is it hard to relax and enjoy life because you always feel that God is demanding more from you? John Sheasby’s book is an excellent guide for escaping this “drudgery of doing to the joy of being.” He uses the Parable of the Prodigal Son to help us see how we, as adopted children of God, don’t need to live in bondage to fear or to anything else. I especially recommend The Birthright to those struggling with anxiety, perfectionism, and people-pleasing.  Learn More

 

  2. Bittersweet by Shauna NiequistBittersweet  

Shauna Niequist’s Bittersweet: Thoughts on Change, Grace, and Learning the Hard Way is an honest look at suffering and how we might rejoice in the midst of it. In this “ode to all things bittersweet,” Niequist shares how God ministered to her through challenges that ranged from the uncomfortable (like moving to a new state), to the downright heartbreaking (like losing a child). One of Niequist’s insights: “Rejoicing is no less rich when it contains a splinter of sadness.” Learn More

 

Land Between

3. The Land Between by Jeff Manion

If you’re going through a big change you didn’t ask for — if you’re between relationships, between jobs, or dealing with an illness that won’t go away — I especially recommend Jeff Manion’s The Land Between: Finding God in Difficult Transitions. Manion shows us biblical examples of complaint and personal meltdown, and helps us see how God provided for His people in need. Learn More

 

Assaulted by Joy

4. Assaulted by Joy by Stephen Simpson

When Stephen Simpson became a Christian as a boy, he thought Jesus was offering him an easier life. So when things got tough, Simpson got angry. Throughout struggles that hit him seemingly because he was a Christian,  Simpson found cynicism more comfortable than joy. Things changed when he and his wife were told to expect quadruplets; Simpson had no fight left in him. But instead of feeling defeated, Simpson felt joy through surrendering to God’s wisdom and care. Simpson’s book is a funny and true-to-life book about learning to live with the tension between joys and trials of being a Christian. Learn More

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