Brooke Fraser – C.S. Lewis Song

If i find in myself desires nothing in this world can satisfy,
I can only conclude that I was not made for here
If the flesh that i fight is at best only light and momentary,
then of course I’ll feel nude when to where I’m destined I’m compared

[CHORUS]
Speak to me in the light of the dawn
Mercy comes with the morning
I will sigh and with all creation groan as I wait for hope to come for me

Am i lost or just found? On the straight or on the roundabout of the wrong way?
is this a soul that stirs in me, is it breaking free, wanting to come alive?
‘Cause my comfort would prefer for me to be numb
An avoid the impending birth of who I was born to become

[CHORUS]

[BRIDGE]
For we, we are not long here
Our time is but a breath, so we better breathe it
And I, I was made to live, I was made to love, I was made to know you
Hope is coming for me
Hope, He’s coming

Reserve Reading – Greco-Roman Backgrounds

Greco-Roman World of the New Testament

“The [Roman] imperial coinage (which was regularly used as a propaganda medium)… is full of the characteristic motifs of Advent and Epiphany, celebrating the blessings which the manifestation of each successive divine emperor was to bring to a waiting world. Among the adulatory formulas with which the emperor was acclaimed, [Prof. Ethelbert Stauffer] mentions, as going back probably to the first century, “Hail, Victory, Lord of the earth, Invincible, Power, Glory, Honour, Peace, Security, Holy, Blessed, Great, Unequalled, Thou Alone, Worthy art Thou, Worthy is he to inherit the Kingdom, Come, come, do not delay, Come again” (p. 155). [in Christ and the Caesars, Ethelbert Stauffer (1955)]. Indeed, one has only to read Psalm 72, “in Latin, in the official language of the empire, to see that it is largely the same formal language which is used alike in the Forum for the advent of the emperor and in the catacombs for the celebration of the Epiphany of Christ” (p. 251). Here there could be no compromise. Who was worthy to ascend the throne of the universe and direct the course of history? Caesar, or Jesus?”
… F. F. Bruce (1910-1990/1), The Apostolic Defense of the Gospel, London: Inter-Varsity Press, 1959, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1959, p. 65

Quote of the Day

C.S. Lewis

John Piper on C.S. Lewis this afternoon:

“the most fundamental reason why he has been so influential in my life, and so awakening to my own soul, is that he remained anchored as a Christian in the unfathomable rock-solid objectivity of God and his Truth and his gospel as infinitely Beautiful and infinitely Desirable and, therefore, as the unshakeable ground of unutterable and exalted Joy.”

Quote of the Day (from yesterday)

From the opening session last night at the 2010 Desiring God Conference for Pastors by Dr. Sam Storms:

“the ultimate purpose of pastoral ministry is identical with the purpose for which God created the universe.” – Sam Storms

Sam Storms

to clarify via Jonathan Edwards:

Jonathan Edwards: “Glorifying God is nothing else than rejoicing in God in his glory. But if God made man to rejoice in this, then he made man to be happy.”

RZIM Summer Institute at Wheaton

RZIM Summer Institute

If you have never attended this conference (and I’d wager that the majority of the 10 people who read this blog have not), then please make it your aim to do so this year.

It is fast becoming the thing around which I schedule the rest of my year. Life-changing is not too strong…