Categories: Ecclesiology

Washed and WaitingIn September, I will be ordering this book, Washed and Waiting: Reflections on Christian Faithfulness and Homosexuality. Wesley is a man I greatly respect. He’s a graduate of The Bethlehem Institute.  He combines a passion for Christ and his Word, and heartbroken openness about his homosexual desires.  In our quickly changing world, I would recommend everyone to pay attention to his message.

From the back cover:

This is a book written primarily for gay Christians and those who love them. Part memoir, part pastoral-theological reflection, this book wrestles with three main areas of struggle that many gay Christians face: (1) What is God’s will for sexuality? (2) If the historic Christian tradition is right and same-sex behavior is ruled out, how should gay Christians deal with their resulting loneliness? (3) How can gay Christians come to an experience of grace that rescues them from crippling feelings of shame and guilt? Author Wesley Hill is not advocating that it is possible for every gay Christian to become straight, nor is he saying that God affirms homosexuality. Instead, Hill comes alongside gay Christians and says, ‘You are not alone. Here is my experience; it’s like yours. And God is with us. We can share in God’s grace.’ While some authors profess a deep faith in Christ and claim a powerful experience of the Holy Spirit precisely in and through their homosexual practice, Hill’s own story, by contrast, is a story of feeling spiritually hindered, rather than helped, by his homosexuality. His story testifies that homosexuality was not God’s original creative intention for humanity—that it is, on the contrary, a tragic sign of human nature and relationships being fractured by sin—and therefore that homosexual practice goes against God’s express will for all human beings, especially those who trust in Christ. This book is written mainly for those homosexual Christians who are trying to walk the narrow path of celibacy and are convinced that their discipleship to Jesus necessarily commits them to the demanding, costly obedience of choosing not to nurture their homosexual desires. With reflections from the lives of Henri Nouwen and Gerard Manley Hopkins, Wesley Hill encourages and challenges Christians with homosexual desires to live faithful to God’s plan for human sexuality. 

“Harry Ironside was pastor of Moody Church in Chicago. He became one of the great expositors of the Word of God in the twentieth century. He tells of taking the train from Chicago to see his widowed mother in California. When he got to his mother’s house overlooking the Pacific Ocean, he saw a tent on the back of her property. She had permitted an old Welsh preacher, who was dying of what people called ‘consumption’ in those days, to put up his tent by the sea. The climate helped his consumption. Wanting to meet the old preacher and to make sure he was harmless, Ironside went out to the old man’s tent.

The old preacher was sitting on a log by a campfire. He said to Ironside, ‘I understand you are going to make a preacher.’ Ironside laughed. After all, he was pastor of one of the elite pulpits in the world. ‘Sit down beside me, and let me share with you some of the things God has taught me,’ the old man told Ironside. He took his Bible and for over an hour shared some of the most beautiful and powerful truths from the Scripture Ironside had ever heard.

When the old man ran out of breath and stopped, Ironside asked him where he got those wonderful truths. Where did he go to school? What books did he read? The old man replied, ‘Nay, but on a sod floor in Wales, kneeling before an open Bible God taught me these things. Pastor, never lose your passion for God’s Word” (from Ironside’s Commentary on Ephesians, qtd in The New Guidebook for Pastors, by James Bryant and Mac Brunson, 238).

22 Mar 2010, Comments Off

Disturb & Comfort: True Preaching

Author: Elijah Layfield

“The true function of a preacher is to disturb the comfortable and to comfort the disturbed” (Chad Walsh, Campus Gods on Trial, 95).

Pastor Sam Crabtree highlights 15 temptations that a pastor might face.

The five I fear the most:

1. Familiarity—“loss of awe at holy and amazing things.”
4. Mediocritydoing the bare minimum.
10. Numbing—“TV, food, escapism, banal entertainment.”
13. Envy—“looking over the fence at some other ministry.”
14. Self-rulefollowing my own agenda rather than taking time to listen and follow the Spirit.

“When Adrian Rogers became pastor of Bellevue Baptist Church in Memphis, Tennessee, the church had been a strong deacon-led church for decades. One of his predecessors, R.G. Lee, had preferred a deacon-led church because he was often gone for preaching engagements. Ramsey Pollard, who followed Lee, was unable to change that procedure. Adrian Rogers believed in a strong pastor-and-staff-led church. When asked what he did to turn this around, he replied that he had the deacons meet only for an hour one Sunday afternoon a month.  He took the first forty-five minutes and taught them what the Bible said about the role of deacons and left them only fifteen minutes to discuss business.  According to Acts 6, they were to be assistants to the pastor, not an official board. He taught them the Word of God” (James Bryant and Mac Brunson, The New Guidebook for Pastors, 23).