Knowing God Audio Book by J.I. Packer Available for Free

For the month of January, ChristianAudio.com is offering a free download of J.I. Packer’s book, Knowing God. You can get it here.

Fruitfulness vs. Efficiency

Doug Wilson shares Seven Thoughts on Time Management. Here is a brief excerpt from his first point.

“The point is fruitfulness, not efficiency. You should want to be fruitful like a tree, not efficient like a machine.

But this fruitfulness is a function of God’s blessing, and it is surrendered work that is blessed work. Seek that blessing, and seek it through concrete surrender. Such surrenders are not abstract. Put your Isaacs on the altar. Every interruption is a chance to surrender your work to the only one who can bless your work, particularly when the interruptions come from your kid wanting to play catch.”

You can read the remainder of the post here.

Haiti: Ten Months Later

As you view these sobering photographs, allow your heart to be stirred. Please take time to pray for the people of Haiti. Pray that it is not only the the humanitarian aid that is sent to Haiti, but more importantly, the gospel.

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/11/haiti_ten_months_later.html

(HT: Zach Nielsen)

A Humbling Discussion

At a TGC roundtable discussion James MacDonald asks C.J. Mahaney some tough questions about humility, pride, correction, and love:

(HT: Justin Taylor)

Redeeming the Realities of Marriage

From Mike Pohlman via the Gospel Coalition blog:

Paul Tripp has a new book on marriage coming out May 1. There’s irony in this because as you’ll hear in the video below, Tripp “hates marriage books.”

Based on what I’m learning about What Did You Expect? Redeeming the Realities of Marriage, this is not a book that people serious about strengthening their marriage will hate. (And be sure to check out Crossway’s 35% off pre-order sale.)

Paul Tripp from Crossway on Vimeo.

The Prosperity Gospel in Africa

Please watch and be grieved by this eight-minute Christianity Today video on America’s most ugly export:

Popout

The Prosperity Gospel from The Global Conversation on Vimeo.

(HT: Justin Taylor)

Mission is the Opposite of Self

This past week the Leadership Network and Catalyst presented an online conference entitled The Nines which featured 70 speakers from all over the country sharing nine minute segments. Although I wasn’t able to watch as much as I would have liked, I do appreciate both Leadership Network and Catalyst for making this great event available at no charge. One of the speakers I was looking forward to but was unable to see was Ed Stetzer. Thankfully, he has posted his nine minute presentation for those of us who missed it.

Ed Stetzer – The 9s from LifeWay on Vimeo.

The Butterfly Circus

A good friend shared this film on Facebook today and after viewing it I wanted to pass it along. Please take time to watch this beautiful movie. It is only twenty minutes in length and worth every second!

When You Have Nothing Better To Do

http://relevant.tv

The Importance of Liturgy

Yesterday I came across this (somewhat) older article from Jonathan McIntosh. I enjoyed reading his thoughts on liturgy and appreciate a lot of what he had to say. Here is a brief excerpt of Jonathan explaining his illustration of a tethered balloon:

A really buoyant balloon however, has to be tied to a string to be enjoyed. In fact, it is only the filled balloon that needs to be tied. The leaky balloon is already on its way down, and will lie crumpled on the floor by morning. If the Church is only led by spirit and creativity, then it, like the filled balloon cut free, will fly off into error and flakiness. The long string of tradition, the faithful tradition of 2,000 years of Christian history, will keep the filled balloon in place where it can be truly useful. Both are needed and both need each other. Helium and the string. Creativity and tradition.

We didn’t create the Church. Neither did the generation before us. This is not some new fad. This thing has been going on for thousands of years, and faithful men and women have passed down an ancient tradition of what it means to worship God from generation to generation. Should it now be abandoned? Our hope is to find out if something important can still be gleaned from the liturgical forms of the ancient church, if there is a way to connect with God using these forms that doesn’t become stale or produce mere heartless repetition.

You can read the rest of the article here.

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