ABC has a new look with their online news. I think ABC are the leaders in Australia when it comes to using new media such as videos, podcasts, RSS feeds and other Web 2.0 gear. Here is a tour on how the new site works. They have a great play list feature which means you can tailor the news to suit you! Kind of like a choose your own adventure! Very post-modern…
Lost and Found 2: The Fishermen
I caught a fish once. Once. That’s it. I’ve always lived near water, but never been a fisherman. Some of Jesus’ close disciples were fishermen. They caught more fish than me – especially when Jesus gave them a hand! In Luke 5:1-11 Jesus meets some peeps at the end of a long and unsuccessful night of fishing. He tells them to throw their net in one more time. Begrudgingly they do. To their astonishment they get the biggest catch of their lives… even the boat starts to sink!
Simon Peter responds to Jesus with the words: “Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man!” In the presence of Jesus, Peter recognises that he is nothing. He is sinful. He is lost. Jesus responds: “Don’t be afraid; from now on you will catch men.” This isn’t a reference to them running down Oxford Street looking for men to catch – rather Jesus is calling them to a career change. Still fishing, but not for fish, but people – people who are lost, people that Jesus came to find.
After the greatest catch of their fishing careers – they leave all of it behind to follow Jesus. Are you lost? Are you willing to give up everything to follow Jesus? Only in Jesus can you be found.
ps – we looked after my sister’s two fish at the start of the year – one of them died. Sorry Jen. Note to family: don’t entrust us with your pets!
Lost Cat: Found
Josh lost his cat. He’s now back. I have another possible lost and found illustration to go with Riley’s adventure from last weekend. Keep them coming!
Lost and Found 1: Who is Jesus?
“Boy haven’t you grown”
“I remember when you were only this big”
“Why didn’t you perform any of your party tricks when you were living in Nazareth?”
I wonder if these are the words that Jesus heard when he returned to his old stomping ground. Did he have one of those Aunties that grabs your cheeks in such a patronising way – you know the ones?
In Luke 4:14-30 we see Jesus return to Nazareth, read the Bible, and preach a sermon. The local Nazarenes didn’t like what he said. They were amazed and astonished at the way that he taught – but they didn’t really take his message to heart. Instead they tried to kill him. But it wasn’t yet Jesus’ time.
Who is Jesus?
Jesus is more than just some country boy who moves to the city and then makes it big. Jesus isn’t just a cool guy to have around at parties (although water into wine is very useful!). Almost every religion is willing to accept that Jesus was a great teacher – but he was much more than that!
Jesus is the Spirit-Anointed one who brings Salvation
Jesus identifies himself with the Isaiah 61 passage that he read out in the Synagogue. Jesus is the one Anointed by the Spirit (already made obvious in Luke 3 with Jesus’ baptism and Luke 4 with Jesus’ temptation in the dessert) to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour to the poor, prisoners, blind and the oppressed.
Jesus’ mission? To seek and to save the lost (Luke 19:10). The people in vv18-19 are lost. They are helpless. They are without hope. They are homeless bums, they are destitute, and they are troubled. Jesus came to seek and save people like that. When Jesus meets their physical needs – ultimately it is pointing to their far greater spiritual need.
Jesus is the Spirit-Anointed one who brings Judgement
In Isaiah 61 not only does it say that the Spirit-anointed one will bring salvation – he will also bring judgement. That is clear in this passage. There is judgement upon the people of Nazareth for rejecting their own local boy as there is judgment upon Israel in the time of Elijah and Elisha. Ironically, in taking offence at Jesus’ teaching, the Nazarenes try to kill Jesus. This is judgment upon them. Ultimately this near miss points us to the way that Jesus will rescue the lost: his death on the cross.
Are you lost or found?
Jesus brings both salvation and judgment. There are religious nuts that don’t recognise their need for Jesus. Jesus will judge those that reject him. Whether you are physically rich or poor – you are spiritually lost – and only in Jesus, the Spirit-Anointed one, can you be found.
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Part 1 of a series this week on Lost and Found. I’m writing a series of talks and studies on Lost and Found. These aren’t the talks… just some thinking. Would love to hear comments.
Human Tetris
(h/t plunks)
John Piper writes about my blog
John Piper:
And the point is not that the afflictions merely precede the glory; they help produce the glory. There is a real causal connection between how we endure hardship now and how much we will be able to enjoy the glory of God in the ages to come. Not one moment of patient pain is wasted. I do not lose heart . . . FOR all my troubles are producing for me an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison.
Check the rest out here.
Safari 3 – world’s best browser?
Apple claim that their browser, Safari, is the world’s best. They’ve now made it available for windows. I downloaded it. But it didn’t work. I removed it. Downloaded it again. Still didn’t work. This afternoon the apple updater had a new download for Safari. I downloaded it for the final time. It works!! I’m giving it a go. They claim to be the fastest and use the least amount of resources. Firefox is good… but it has been getting clunkier and clunkier to run.
If you know any short cut buttons – let me know them in the comments. (esp the one that is ctrl + tab in firefox which moves from one tab to the next)