Sunday, September 30, 2012

Bon appétit.


Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.

Scripture passage Psalm 119: 129-135  

129 Your laws are wonderful.
No wonder I obey them!
130 The teaching of your word gives light,
so even the simple can understand.
131 I pant with expectation,
longing for your commands.
132 Come and show me your mercy,
as you do for all who love your name.
133 Guide my steps by your word,
so I will not be overcome by evil.
134 Ransom me from the oppression of evil people;
then I can obey your commandments.
135 Look upon me with love;
teach me your decrees.
Section from the book
But what is clear is that Scripture requires both head and heart, and you need to see it not just as a text but as the very words of God. This will encourage you to pay close attention to the very words he uses, but it will also compel you to feast on those words as light-shedding, wisdom-dispensing, and life-giving counsel from on high.

Simple thoughts
The Bible is more than a book. God’s word is something that needs to be experienced, lived, digested, shared, listened to, and so on. God’s word is something that needs to be thought of as a meal. Something done regularly, to be enjoyed ,  and to be digested. Bon appétit.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Check your ID



 
Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.

Scripture passage Romans 5: 3-5  

3 We can rejoice, too, when we run into problems and trials, for we know that they help us develop endurance. 4 And endurance develops strength of character, and character strengthens our confident hope of salvation. 5 And this hope will not lead to disappointment. For we know how dearly God loves us, because he has given us the Holy Spirit to fill our hearts with his love.

Section from the book
When the world strips away your comfort and confidence in things temporal, when friends become enemies and attack you, when in the providence of God suffering enters your life like a flash flood, you are given an opportunity to see very clearly where your ultimate dependence lies and where you find your identity.

Simple thoughts
There are two kinds of suffering and trials. One is the self inflicted kind where there are consequences for your actions. The other comes when something happens that you had no control over. The key to both kinds of suffering is knowing that God causes all things to work for good for those who love him. I really love what it says above in regards to suffering and trials. You are given an opportunity to see very clearly where your ultimate dependence lies and where you find your identity. When you come to the realization that your ultimate dependence and your identity is found in Christ. You should say thank you suffering, thank you trials. When a person’s dependence and identity is in something other than Christ they are doomed now and possibly forever unless they change and trust in Christ. The next time a trial or suffering comes upon you let it be an opportunity to check your identity.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Do you go to church to be fed?



Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.

Scripture passage  Psalm 29: 1-2
1 Honor the Lord, you heavenly beings;
honor the Lord for his glory and strength.
2 Honor the Lord for the glory of his name.
Worship the Lord in the splendor of his holiness.

Section from the book
You should think of worship as an opportunity to offer something to God, not just to receive something. You should come with the intention of offering your words, your mind, your heart, and your entire life to the God who has rescued you from sin, death, and hell itself.

Simple thoughts
Do you go to church to be fed? Do you go to get filled up for the rest of the week? If that is the reason you go to church you’re selfish. You should go to church to give not to get. You should first and foremost go to church to give worship to God with other believers. And that is no excuse not to worship him the other 6 days of the week either. Worshiping in church is not for your good, it is for the glory and pleasure of God. Going to church is not about being fed, it more about being led by the grace that God has shown you and publicly not just thanking him but worshiping him for it. Needless to say when you worship God you will in the end be fed and it will carry you through anything.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

You're UGLY



Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.
Scripture passage  John 17: 1-3
17 After saying all these things, Jesus looked up to heaven and said, “Father, the hour has come. Glorify your Son so he can give glory back to you. 2 For you have given him authority over everyone. He gives eternal life to each one you have given him. 3 And this is the way to have eternal life—to know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, the one you sent to earth.

Section from the book
Good theology uncovers the truth about ourselves—that we are men and women made in God’s image, who exist for his glory, but have turned inward and ugly through our own sin. Without the hope of the gospel we are objects of wrath and await destruction
Simple thoughts

Theology is an interesting word, it brings up images of really smart people. I had a pastor one time tell me that I had a theological mind, I thought to myself this guy is not to smart. However as I have come to realize that theology is not all about being really smart. I like what was said in the section above, good theology uncovers the truth about ourselves. Good theology is when you come to the realization that you are not who you were created to be and that indeed you are a sinner (you’re ugly) and the only way to fix it is to trust in God. Otherwise you are headed for wrath and destruction aka. Hell. For some theology leads to pride and for others it leads to Jesus. Make sure you practice good theology.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Un-happiness is a choice



A while back I posted a comment on facebook that didn’t get much action. The comment has continued to make me think for days now. The comment was something like un-happiness occurs when you make yourself god. The more I think about it the more true it becomes. You become unhappy when things don’t go the way you think they should or when people don’t do what you want them to. Does not wanting things you want and not considering what God wants really make you god in your own mind?  Unhappiness is a choice, choose God instead.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Resturant Review: Mondo's Draft House


Mondo’s Draft House

 

We needed a place to eat in Iowa City and wanted to try something new. I did a little research and fell in love with this picture.

 

A salmon BLT! It was all I could think about. So Mondo’s Draft House it was. The overall theme I would call an upscale sports bar it was very nice. The décor was rich and elegant for a sports bar. The service was good but for what I would call an upscale establishment (that serves $30 steaks) the dress of the wait staff did not match the décor. Their attire was a takeoff on Hooters, just out of place for what you can see here a very nice place.  

 

When the food arrived I knew immediately that my expectations of Mondo’s Draft House were set to high. I did not take any pictures of our food but now wish I had. If you refer to the picture of the Salmon BLT above which is amazing. What I ordered came on a regular bun in a plastic basket on paper! Far from what the picture showed. I will say despite the let down it was a good sandwich. The fries that came with them were undercooked and soggy. I won’t go into a lot of detail about the other dishes I sampled at the table, the French Dip was average, the Mac and Cheese was okay, the mashed potatoes were the worst I’ve ever had and the steak bruschetta salad was just weird, almost greasy.  With all that said Mondo’s received one of the lowest value scores I’ve ever given. My sandwich served in plastic was $12.00. I would have valued it at $7.00. Needless to say a bad experience but when it comes to eating out sometimes you win sometimes you lose.  This time we lost, never give up trying.

 Price range: (everyday, a night out, a special occasion only) Special occasion

Overall rankings all based 1 to 5

Atmosphere:  3.5

Service:         3.5

Food:             2

Value:           1

Overall          2

516 2nd Street
Coralville
(319) 337-3000

Monday, September 10, 2012

Break time


Time to take a short break from the daily blog. I need to concentrate for a bit on a sermon for September 30th. As soon as it's done I'll be back.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Trust me you need this



Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.
Scripture passage 1 John 5:21
Little children, keep yourselves from idols.
Section from the book
The call to keep one’s self from idols is given to the church. This sounds strange, as you see yourself as a worshiper of God and not of strange deities. But there it is at the end of John’s epistle. His last words in that letter to the church are, “Keep yourselves from idols.” The warning isn’t given to them because it wasn’t a real danger or because there was an off chance someone might fall into idolatry. It was given because this is our root problem on any given day. It is what we, especially as followers of Jesus, must fight against.
Even when you know the dangers of idolatry and the command to keep yourself from idols, do you know what idols you need to keep yourself from? It is not enough to say that you will worship Christ alone and reject false gods. You must be able to recognize the form idolatry takes in your life.
Simple thoughts
I’m sure you do not have a golden calf enshrined somewhere in your house that you worship everyday. But I am sure somewhere ,you have an idol that you worship more than you even know. The funny thing about idols is that they don’t look like you’d think. They are not statues; they may not even be a physical thing. The simple definition of an idol is anything you place in front of God. To indentify your idols just look where you spend the most of your time and money, that could very well be your idol. What is it that you are the most afraid of losing? That could be your idol. Where does your mind drift off to when given the chance? That too could be your idol.  I will go out on a limb and say that the root of all your personal problems is in fact idolatry. The way to kill roots in a septic system is copper sulfate. The way to kill the roots of idolatry in your life is a fresh and renewed sense of the gospel.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

A complaint is nothing but a lack of trust




Scripture passage Philippians 2:14
Do all things without grumbling or questioning.

Section from the book
Let’s get something straight. You complain, and you know it. The problem with your complaining is that you do not see it as a problem. You view it as harmless venting. You believe you are just stating facts, that a certain circumstance is frustrating. Your justification of complaining is truly unfortunate, because it certainly bothers God. The reason you complain is the reason it is wrong.

You complain because you misunderstand (or just miss altogether) the grace you have received and the purposes of God in your life. You misunderstand the grace you have received by not recognizing it and receiving it with gratitude. Life, breath, and all of God’s provisions for your life are acts of his kindness and are truly wonderful, and yet they all seem to disappear when the small inconveniences of life appear.

And no, you do not get a pass because you can handle the big problems in life but not the small ones. Perhaps when sickness, death, and affliction come into your life, you run to God and his promises and find comfort that gives peace and patience. Maybe it is just the small stuff that you sweat. So what is the big deal? Everything! In fact, your complaining about the small stuff is more dangerous than complaining about the big, because life is made up of the small stuff. Tragedies punctuate periods of your life, but it is the smaller inconveniences that make up the bulk of your existence, and this is what most people will see you handle. Those situations are the most obvious testing ground of your faith. If God’s grace is big enough for you to handle the big problems, why isn’t it enough for you to walk meekly though the smaller issues?

 Simple thoughts
It is hard for me to say and it may be hard for you to hear but anytime you complain you may think you are only stating facts but the truth is you are really ungrateful for what you do have and questioning God for the circumstances He gave you for your own good. Ouch! I’ve done it and you have too, the key is recognizing it and fixing it. Because complaining is draining and complaining is not a conversation, although there are some who would be mute if they couldn’t complain. The next time you are about to complain or hear someone complaining think about it as a lack of trust in God and address it accordingly. Because God causes ALL things to work together for good for those who love him, even what your complaining about.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Who's on your pedastal?



Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.

Scripture passage 1 Peter 5:5
Clothe yourselves, all of you, with humility toward one another, for “God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.”

Section from the book
You are proud, and what makes this so dangerous is that you don’t realize just how proud you are. There are two reasons you see pride as a sin that isn’t a real problem for you. One is that you are quick to compare yourself to the worst examples of proud men and women, and this gives you a sense of self-righteousness that comforts you. Comparatively, you believe you aren’t “that bad.” This makes little of a very serious sin problem.

The second reason you think pride isn’t a serious issue for you is that you think so little of your talents and abilities. But poor self-esteem is not an indication of humility or meekness. In fact, it may be a disregarding of the gifts God has given you and a mocking of the work he is doing in your life. How does this connect to pride? Haven’t you used this excuse of no ability and no talent to clear yourself of responsibility? Isn’t it possible that you have used poor self-esteem as an excuse for doing nothing or as a means of saving face? Who could fault you when you don’t claim to be good at anything? Make no mistake about it—you are proud!

  Simple thoughts

Pride is all about elevation. Pride occurs when a person elevates themselves. Immediately when you compare yourself to someone worse than you, you just elevated yourself. That’s pride. The other side of the coin is very sneaky and one many have never thought about and that is when you try and lower yourself you are trying to manipulate others into elevating you. Either way you are putting yourself on a pedestal when Christ is the only one who deserves the top spot.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Confidence is looking in the mirror and seeing someone else



Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.

Scripture passage Isaiah 44:22
I have swept away your sins like a cloud.
I have scattered your offenses like the morning mist.
Oh, return to me,
for I have paid the price to set you free.”

Section from the book
You can, and must, return to God daily. His promise is that he will receive you as you come—in faith, not in moral purity. This is what gospel confidence looks like. It is not an insincere approach to God that dismisses our corruption while presuming on his grace, but a heartfelt dependency on the grace of Christ to make us acceptable at all times. Gospel confidence is not found in our best religious performance, be it guilt-penance or law keeping, but in the merit and mercy of Jesus on our behalf.
  Simple thoughts


Gospel confidence is something we should strive for. But it is something that we can never achieve on our own. In fact the more we try to achieve it, the more distant it becomes. It is in a sense just like today’s picture, when you look into the mirror you need to see someone else, Jesus. When you can do this that is when you will have gospel confidence.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Kill it


Scripture passage Romans 8:13
For if you live according to the flesh you will die, but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will live.

Section from the book
You seem to think that your sins will somehow die of old age. It’s as if you believe you can wait them out, and they will eventually grow weak and fail. But the truth is your sin ages more like an oak tree. If you aren’t chopping it down, its roots are growing deeper, and its branches are growing stronger.

In other words, your sin will not just go away. You are called to aggressively seek sin’s destruction—to kill it. But even when you understand this, it is more complicated than plotting its murder, for the act of killing sin is a slow, continuous process that runs the span of your life. And if you are not putting sin to death, then you will find that it is seeking your destruction. As John Owen said, “Be killing sin or it will be killing you.”

Killing sin isn’t merely the cutting of branches but a striking at the root. This means you need to do more than recognize your sin of impatience; you must seek to know how this branch of sin is connected to the root of pride. From there you can get to work. But the work of killing sin is not moral improvement or personal reformation. It is the Holy Spirit empowered spiritual war against all forms of corruption that would lead you away from the gospel. Sin and temptation lead you away from the gospel by telling you that you can find greater fulfillment and satisfaction in something other than Jesus. Your sinful actions always reflect the battle within you over your allegiance.

What this means is that the true nature of spiritual warfare is a fight against indwelling sin, and that the only success you can have in that fight is through the power of God’s Spirit. And how is it that you and the Spirit can work together? How is it that the Holy Spirit has come to dwell in you? The answer is found in the gospel. God justifies the sinner, gives him the Spirit, and sanctifies him in the truth by the Spirit. Your hope in this war against sin is outside of yourself in God. In the end, you are called to kill sin because it seeks to lead you away from the hope of the gospel, and you are able to kill sin because of the hope of the gospel.

 Simple thoughts
No reason to say anything more.  

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

What's behind your good works?




Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.
Scripture passage 1 Peter 2: 24-25
He personally carried our sins in his body on the cross so that we can be dead to sin and live for what is right. By his wounds you are healed.
25 Once you were like sheep who wandered away. But now you have turned to your Shepherd, the Guardian of your souls.

Section from the book
Your progress in the faith, your sanctification, is not a result of will power or education but the consequence of Christ’s atoning work
 Simple thoughts
Did you do a good deed yesterday? Did you memorize a Bible verse? Did you have some quality time with God? If you did and your motives were pure it was only possible by the death of Jesus. Prior to that you were a slave to sin and everything you did had a selfish motive. Even today some of the good things you do still have a selfish motive, but Christ’s death has made it possible for good and pure motives. Kind of like helping an old lady across the street did you do it out of a love for her or just for street cred. Be honest with yourself and think of how many times you have done “good” things for selfish reasons. Good things don’t happen because of what you do, they happen because of what Jesus has already done.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Repentance Reaction





Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.

Scripture passage 2 Corinthians 7:10

10 For the kind of sorrow God wants us to experience leads us away from sin and results in salvation. There’s no regret for that kind of sorrow. But worldly sorrow, which lacks repentance, results in spiritual death.

Section from the book

You will never be done with repentance—at least, not until death or Christ’s return. While it is something you should be doing frequently, it is not something you just “get used to.” Repentance requires a daily intentionality. And let’s be honest; you will have more to repent of by the end of the day than you can possibly remember. So, where should you start? The big picture is that repentance is both an attitude and an action. It is more than being sorry for sin, and it is more than cutting out a bad habit.
 Simple thoughts

I like what the book says here that repentance is more than an action. Many of us have heard the definition of repentance as turning and walking away from your sin. It needs to be much more than that. Repentance is also an attitude, true repentance is a hate for the sin you’ve committed against God and when you truly see if for what it is your response shouldn’t be much different than Kevin’s in the movie classic Home Alone.  When you understand the sin you’ve committed against God you should be repulsed, shocked, or even mortified. If you’re not you may be just sorry or just sorry they got caught. You must understand that repentance is much more than being sorry or stopping a bad habit.

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Is it real?



Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.

Scripture passage Proverbs 4:23
Keep your heart with all vigilance, for from it flow the springs of life.

Section from the book
The call to keep your heart is a call to work on your life internally, not merely externally. The latter is easy; the former is much harder and more complicated. The religious or moral person will focus on the external and maintain good appearances, but it may have little to nothing to do with the heart. God is first and foremost concerned with your heart, for when you are keeping your heart, the rest of life follows.

To keep your heart means that your focus and work is on maintaining communion with God and pursuing the transformation that only God can accomplish in you. It is not performance-based religion, nor the moral improvement of your life, but the ongoing work of cultivating love for God and hatred for sin. It is the unending effort of guarding ourselves against idols while resting in the promises of the gospel.

Simple thoughts
God knows the heart, the question you need to ask yourself is how much time do you spend actually working on your heart and I’m not talking cardio here. You must ask yourself do you spend more time working on your actual heart or is your time spent making your outside look good when there is nothing on the inside? It’s much like today’s picture of an inflatable tank. Ever since there have been tanks militaries from all over the world have utilized fake, inflatable tanks to trick the enemy. To make them think there is more than there really is. Do you do that with your heart? Do you make it appear to be something that it’s not? Even though inflatable tanks may have tricked some over the years, God knows the heart. There is no tricking him the only one you are deceiving is you. Don’t spend your time working on your religion or even moral improvements. Spend it on your heart and considering the gospel is a good place to start.  

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Go ahead and hate




Note to Self by Joe Thorn is a book that I now use as a daily devotional. Each day I will share the scripture passage and an expert from the book and a few of my own thoughts as part of my blog.
Scripture passage Proverbs 8:13
The fear of the Lord is hatred of evil. Pride and arrogance and the way of evil and perverted speech I hate.

Section from the book
In all your longing to love as Christ loved, you sometimes forget that true love for one thing will, or at least should, produce a hatred for whatever stands against it. Do not neglect cultivating hatred, an intense hatred, for the right things

If you are following Jesus, cherishing the gospel, and loving God and neighbor, then you will hate well. If you do not hate evil, you will find yourself more susceptible to temptation, slower to respond to corruption, and unmotivated to contend for the faith. Hate is a real part of your faith—don’t forget it.

Simple thoughts
Hard to believe, but you are supposed be a hater, Jesus was. Jesus never sinned and hated, it is possible but you must hate the right things.  The Bible talks so much about love and people emphasize the love aspect so much that they think hate is off limits. Well it’s not. To truly love something you have to hate the something that stands against it. The first thing a Christian needs to learn to hate is their own sin. If you don’t learn to hate the things that need to be hated you had better ask yourself how much you love Jesus.

In case you needed proof that Jesus hated see Revelation 2:6 But this is in your favor: You hate the evil deeds of the Nicolaitans, just as I do.