Not Worrying About What Others Think: The Glorious Gospel
Jonathan Dodson wrote a wonderful book we’ve been assigned this term entitled, The Unbelievable Gospel: Say Something Worth Believing. In it, Dodson stressed that the gospel must be central to everything that a believer thinks and how they live. The misconception is that the gospel is operable only at the early stages of a Christ-follower’s life—when they are first saved. To the contrary, the gospel should be prominant throughout a believer’s life until they meet Jesus face to face. The confidence that the gospel brings helps a believer to have assurance, the kind of conviction expressed by Dr. Page in not worrying what people think.
Dodson expressed several ways that humans—Christians and non-Christians—try to find acceptance and significance in life:
Proving yourself to yourself; proving yourself to others; proving yourself to God. Each of these efforts to find acceptance has a different target: self, people, or God. As we have seen, our efforts are not enough.2
The hope humans seek can only be found in God. Justification by faith (Rom. 8:15; 17;
1 Cor. 6:17; Gal. 3:27; Col. 1:27) puts a stamp on our lives, sealing the unchanging fact that we are in Christ and have all of the benefits therein!
Many—including myself—have lived with a distorted understanding of the Good News that Christ brings to our lives. Dodson writes of the same confidence pointed out by Dr. Page when he said:
[The gospel] frees us from what others think by releasing us into what God the Father thinks — God, the infinite, all-loving, truly glorious, humanity-restoring, grace-giving, personally attentive Savior and Lord. He looks at us and says, ‘You’re accepted, loved; you’re mine. Now go have fun, be yourself in Jesus, and when you have opportunity and prompting, tell others what I think of you in Christ.’3
Can I hear a great big, “AMEN?”
The Word brings a promise to all believers: “The fear of man lays a snare, but whoever trusts in the Lord is safe” (Prov. 29: 25—ESV).
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1 Dr. Frank Page, “Presentation: Becoming a Missional Leader,” WRSP 845 lecture, Liberty University (accessed August 2, 2017), https://download.liberty.edu/courses/gibtj.mp4.
2 Jonathan K. Dodson, The Unbelievable Gospel: Say Something Worth Believing (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2014), 149.
3 Ibid., 108.
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Living and Worshiping with Purpose—Part 5: Worship and Prayer
Thoughts on prayer
Various kinds of prayer
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Living and Worshiping with Purpose—Part 4: Worship and Giving
The essence of stewardship implies a two-party proposition. One person owns the resources and the other person is entrusted with the resources. By definition, a steward is accountable to his master for how resources are invested. So how does this apply to us today? Since God owns all things [Psa. 24:1], he is the Master; he distributes gifts and resources at his discretion. We are stewards; accountable to him for all that we do with all that we are given.3
4
Robert Morgan, “Presentation: Worship and Giving – Part 1,” Liberty University Online, WRSP 835 lecture, https://download.liberty.edu/courses/nl0i8.mp4 (accessed April 13, 2017).Powered by WPeMatico
Living and Worshiping with Purpose—Part 3: Worship and Singing
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Living and Worshiping with Purpose—Part 2: Worship and Preaching
One’s method of preaching may be expository or otherwise, but unpacking truth in the midst of the congregation is scripturally mandated. 2 Timothy 4: 2 states, “Preach the word! Be ready in season and out of season. Convince, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching” (NKJV).
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