"There is a river whose streams shall make glad the city of God." --Psalm 46:4

My Photo
Serving God with His people at Faith OPC has been a great joy and blessing. When I grow up, I want to umpire Little League Baseball. I will revel on that day when I can say to a 10-year-old boy after four pitched balls, "Take a walk in the sunshine." My wife of 30+ years, Peggy, consistently demonstrates the love of Christ and remains my very best friend. Our six children, our four lovely, sweetie-pie daughters-in-law, and our four grandchildren serve as resident theologians.
Showing posts with label A Born Again OPC Minister. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Born Again OPC Minister. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

On Reading

Practice and training with learning

“God chose to send his living Word into the world for 30 years, and his written Word into the world for 2000+ years. Think of the assumption behind this divine decision. People in each generation would be dependent on those who read. Some people, if not all, would have to learn to read—and read well, in order to be faithful to God.” Pastor John Piper


On this blog, I have mentioned the pilgrimage that God has set before me. Having the hope of the Gospel brought to me in my eighteenth year, life became one gigantic appetite for God’s Word and His ways in the world. But a great deal of practice and training with learning needed attention. I am not ashamed to admit that this matter still needs attention.

Learning to read—not merely pronounce the words in a sentence—became the central task back around 1974-75-ish.

Month by month, year by year, my wife—bless her for patience—has been the most helpful to me. She guided me greatly in my 20’s helping me to practice reading sentences not only so words were correctly pronounced but to gain understanding. I remember mixing up immortality and immorality not in pronunciation but in meaning. That was embarrassing.

Another key practice was jumping in to read. C’mon on in—the water’s great! Early on faithful men in our local church put into my hands well-written, meaty, reliable books on the Christian faith. That was key. Reading begets reading. Authors inform. Authors inspire. Authors reinforce.

The first step of exposure—opening the book, looking over the Table of Contents, skimming around in some chapters, checking out footnotes, references and indices—provides initial focus.

But beyond that there’s the motivation to think, meditate and make connections—that’s the work of understanding. Language-based learning, which implements habits of reading, requires the exercise of the brain. Habits like: 1) noting the facts and images presented in the words, sentences and paragraphs, 2) giving consideration to the knowledge and organization of facts already stored in the brain, and 3) assessing and evaluating inferences and conclusions.

For the past 6 or 8 years, I am trying to implement another practice in reading—look for the relationship that one part of knowledge has with another. There’s always some form of interrelatedness. Subjects cannot be studied in isolation of others. What a task! I am trying to make gains on this perspective.

I have just read a book by Peter J. Leithart entitled, Defending Constantine. I am challenged by the height, breadth and width of Dr. Leithart’s knowledge of theology, politics, Roman Empire history and the ecclesiastical landscape of the 3rd and 4th centuries. It might be the first book for me to pick up and read right away a second time. I want to learn how to read.

In the beginning was the Word…

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and instruction.

G. Mark Sumpter

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

God's New Society


Growing in Christ's Church Opening Paragraphs

When the revision of the high school Sunday School material published by Great Commission Publications was done back in 1988-89, I assisted the project with the following:

In his book, God's New Society, John Stott points out that all too often “we emphasize that Christ died for us 'to redeem us from all iniquity’ rather that 'to purify for himself a people of his own’ (Titus 2:14). We think of ourselves more as 'Christians' than as 'churchmen,' and our message is more good news of a new life than of a new society” (p. 9). Does that sound like you and your senior highs? Read on. The family of God, the Body of Christ, the fellowship of the Spirit--descriptions of the church tell us something about the believers' relationship to God and to each other. As soon individual Christians are joined with Christ, they are united with fellow Christians. Believers cannot be Lone Rangers even if they want to be. For they are “fellow citizens with God's people and members of God's household.

Stott provides such a great corrective to the individualistic way of faith and life that characterizes my walk with Christ. I need to hear over and over again the cosmic work of Jesus Christ, His work of an every-generation-people.

How I wish that quote from Stott would be branded into my evangelical hide!

O God, save me from the self-centeredness of my individualistic bent when I read and take in Your Word. Your work is for Your glory, not mine.

G. Mark Sumpter

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

From Skim Milk to Deep-Fried Snickers Bars


Why I've Moved From One Puny Pirouette to Bodacious Back Camel Spins at Christmas

Next year it's lights smothered on the fence out front; someone in 2010 hold me to that, OK?


Peggy and I, back in our early years in the OPC, would tip-toe around the holidays. She followed me in my petty-minded parade about this. I can remember when she made a banner with the text, Luke 1:35, pasted on. She and a relative sewed two or three stand-up figures
out of burlap for a manger scene. We draped Christmas lights around the banner and down near the manger scene that was sitting on a TV-tray in the living room. Nothing else displayed the holy mark, the Christian watershed mark of the calendar, regarding the coming of the Lord. For me, it was all reformed simplicty and a well-meant piety to the 10th power, absent the gospel. Silk, no leather. All about finding meaning apart from matter.

What was going on? I had a warped view of the Bible and thus, a truncated view of the cosmic renewal work of Jesus Christ in His life, death and resurrection.


I needed to get saved, and that was about it.

Warped view? My Bible and theology started with the Fall of Adam, not creation. I had the AW Pink cart before the Calvin horse. Sin loomed larger than God's creation. Sin was a broken down relationship with God---me first and only me, the-individual-person me first. That was what Jesus came to fix, to renew.


Truncated view? I was well-versed in my personal experience of conversion, like Acts 9 Damascus Road matters, but somehow Colossians 1, 1 Corinthians 15, Ephesians 1:15-22, and 1 Timothy 4:1-5 were avoided like anchovies. Jesus came to fix humans; again, me first. No new creation, only new creatures--men and women, and boys and girls. Jesus could only handle so much at Calvary, you know.


God's creation is good. Read Nancy Pearcy on this,
It becomes unclean only when sinners use it to express their rebellion against God. The line between good and evil is not drawn between one part of the creation and another part, but runs through the human heart itself--in our disposition to use the creation for good or for evil.

Her quote from Gordon Clark brings in Christmas cheer too: When Adam fell, it was the result of a rebellious will, and not because he had a body.

Celebrations, memorials, anniversaries, fanfare, pageantry---you name it, there's to be doxology within contextual decorum of all kinds that get our glad attention.


The Bible does not begin with the Fall of Man but with Creation.


A bunch of us are going caroling tonight, maybe with candy canes and chocolate kisses to boot.


G. Mark Sumpter

One Potato, Two Potato