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Showing posts from March, 2024

Praying the Bible

“Our prayers should arise out of immersion in the Scripture. [We] speak only to the degree we are spoken to. . .The wedding of the Bible and prayer anchors your life down in the real God.” (Keller 2014, 55, 56) Many books have been written, and many electrons have been rearranged on the internet, about prayer.  And rightly so; prayer is the way we bend our wills to God’s will and influence the things only God can change.  One of the best ways for a Christian to pray is to use the words of the Bible to guide those prayers.  The first place to turn is the Psalms.  The Psalms are often called God’s prayer book.  Luther called them “a Little Bible” because “in it all things that are contained in the whole Bible are given to us in the most wonderfully brief and sweet manner and condensed into a most beautiful manual” (Luther n.d.) . The poems of the Psalms cover the full range of human emotions and allow those emotions to be expressed to God.  Every one of the m...

Answers to Sunday School Questions, Part 10

  Last Summer, we took up questions from our Adult Sunday School Class at First Presbyterian Dyersburg, Tennessee.   I have adapted the answers I gave in articles in the church newsletter, and I wanted to share them here.   I hope you find the short essays helpful.     There are many religions.  Why is Christianity right?  Why is it the one?             Christianity is based on historical claims where most religions are not.  Jesus died on a Roman cross in about 33 A. D. under Pontius Pilate.  These are historical facts that can be checked out to see if they are true.  That means that evidence can be used to justify belief in Christianity.  Some of these arguments and evidence are given above, but there are many places to get evidence for Christianity’s claims.  Here are some names to get you started.            ...

Answers to Sunday School Questions, Part 9

  Last Summer, we took up questions from our Adult Sunday School Class at First Presbyterian Dyersburg, Tennessee.   I have adapted the answers I gave in articles in the church newsletter, and I wanted to share them here.   I hope you find the short essays helpful.     What do you say to someone who tells you that you don’t need to worry about her soul?  She doesn’t participate in church except through video and said that out of anger because I said that we don’t know when we are going to die.              It might be time to back off a bit, pray for them, and let them come to you next time.  At the very least, let them ask you questions first.  It is probable that you have shared the gospel with this person more than once.  Let any future conversations be natural and not forced.  Asking good questions can also help a person think.  Some questions might include: What ...

Answers to Sunday School Questions, Part 8

  Last Summer, we took up questions from our Adult Sunday School Class at First Presbyterian Dyersburg, Tennessee.   I have adapted the answers I gave in articles in the church newsletter, and I wanted to share them here.   I hope you find the short essays helpful.     Why do Presbyterians believe in “predestination?”  All Bible-believing Christians believe in predestination because the word “predestination” is in the Bible.  You must teach about any word that’s in the Bible if you truly claim to believe the Bible.  Presbyterians teach something specific about predestination though, so let’s look at that. It all comes back to what the Bible says.  The Bible says that: “No one is righteous—not even one.  No one is truly wise; no one is seeking God.  All have turned away; all have become useless.  No one does good, not a single one.  Their talk is foul, like the stench from an open grave.  Their tongues are fi...