Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Welcome To Our LifeGroup

We all have faith questions, especially about the Bible.  But many people are intimidated with asking these questions in a group.  If this is you, than you've come to the right place!

Our group is called ‘Got Questions? Biblical Foundations’ and is all about better understanding the word of God in a comfortable and casual setting.  We will talk about what the Bible says and what that means while getting grounded on the things important to living the Christian life.  It’s a great opportunity to fellowship and learn about the Bible.  Come join us!

Details

When: On Mondays evenings this Fall, from 7:00 to 8:30
Where: At the Salazar home
Childcare: $5 per kid, max $10 per family




Monday, June 1, 2015

Tips for Studying the Bible



As Christians, we have a lot of questions that we don’t always know how to investigate on our own, and we’re grateful when somebody will come in and give us the quick answer. But if you’ve raised kids, you know that when your kids have a question and ask you to sort something out for them, they come away with one kind of knowledge. When you allow your kids to work through, and find, and research the answer for themselves, they come away with a completely different kind of understanding. I can remember when I first came to Christianity out of atheism, I really needed to examine the issues for myself. And let’s face it, there are lots of times when it’s not so much an understanding of the truth; it’s not so much that the truth is out there and I just can’t grasp it; it’s that I hold some type of prerequisite, presupposition, that prevents me from seeing the truth clearly.
That’s why for me, as a new Christian, apologetics websites were just as important as the skeptic sites I had been visiting. I wanted to get some balance and some clear thinking on the issues we know are inherent to the Christian worldview. I found myself applying the same skepticism I had as a detective, and an atheist, to my own examination of Scripture. Here is my approach to answering some of my own questions about Christian doctrine, and Christian evidence. These are principles and tools that may help you sort out the truth for yourself. To help you remember, each of them start with the letter “D”. First, some qualities I think are important as a student of the Bible:
First, be Devoted.
This is a matter of passion and interest. The truth is that most of us are just not interested in getting the answers until we hit a crisis point. If we were to measure where we spend our free time, our finances, and our gifts, we would find that we spend a lot of time examining other things. People who are passionate and have a strong desire to learn can do amazing things because they are devoted to begin with. And that’s what I would encourage all of us to cultivate. The questions I ask myself are, Am I truly passionate? Am I truly interested? Am I teachable? Am I eager? And does my allocation of time, resources, and energy, reveal that I am truly a God-worshiper? Am I devoted enough to not wait till a crisis and ask somebody else for the answer? Am I devoted enough to spend my time living a faith that always seeks the answer?
Second, be Deliberate.
I ask myself, do I have a purpose, an intention about the way that I study Scripture? Do I have a goal in mind? Am I purposeful about my approach to my faith? Am I intentional about being a good ambassador? I want to be a good Christian case-maker, and so every time I open Scripture, I mine it and look deeply into it because I want to be able to have a certain grasp of the doctrine, creeds, and essentials that Scripture teaches so that I can defend it to others.
Third, be Disciplined.
I ask myself, am I as disciplined about things related to my faith as I am about other hobbies or daily fitness? I’m disciplined about running and going to the gym a certain number of times a week. Am I that disciplined about the pursuit of my own faith? One thing I discovered is that discipline like this is the difference between those of us who excel at anything, and those of us who don’t.
Fourth, be Dedicated.
I ask myself, am I consistent? Have I been able to develop a pattern that I can really achieve on a consistent basis and can execute daily? Is the examination of my faith part of my long-term spiritual goals? As someone who podcasts, I have recognized that if I am simply a dedicated to doing it every week, after a while I’ll build an audience. It’s not that I have to be perfect in every podcast or be precise in every selection. I want to be, but there are times when I can fail. Yet, I don’t stop. If we were to do the same thing with our spiritual growth and commitment to reading Scripture, it won’t belong before we have a certain mastery of the issues.
Fifth, be Dubious.
I ask myself, do I understand the value of skepticism? Do I accept a doctrine blindly without ever examining it? Do I accept a position because it’s emerged from the Christian culture, rather than because it’s evidenced in Scripture? Detectives always have to be skeptical. Unfortunately, it’s like the basic premise held by the character Greg House, on the show “House;”Everyone lies. It’s that kind of skeptical approach to the issues that helps us want to dig deeper to the truth.
Last, be Detailed.
I ask myself, am I thorough in the number of tools and the kinds of tools that I use? Do I use trustworthy sources for my research? Am I seeking a broad source of opinions from people and sources that I know I can trust are orthodox? Do I sometimes read the other side of the story, as well, to see where other views come from, and then develop the discernment to know if those sources are telling me the truth?
Be deliberate, devoted, disciplined, dedicated, dubious, and finally be detailed. This is the kind of principled approach I would take in studying the Bible and Christianity. In addition, there are some tools that I think may help you:
Get the Right Bible
The first thing I did was purchase an inexpensive Bible with very wide margins. I also purchased a number of multicolored pens. As I studied through the Scripture, I made copious notes, circled and dissected things. I wrote in the margins until it got to the point that my own Bible was very difficult to read because it was filled with so many comments and links to other passages of Scripture. I constantly wrote in my Bibles. I went through several of them.
Get the Right Study Aids
I also needed to get a good commentary. I started with the Wycliffe Bible Commentary from Moody Bible Institute. It’s a 1962 commentary. I still have it on my shelf, and I still use it. It’s a very large Bible commentary for the New and Old Testament. I also have a Holman Bible Dictionary, which I used quite a bit. It’s helpful in looking up certain terms. Eventually one of the most important books in my collection as I was reading through Scripture was a book called Christian Theology, by Millard Erickson. It’s a systematic theology book. Another good systematic theology is by Wayne Grudem. If there was an encyclopedic reference or any research I could put to this text, I would do it, to see what others have seen there that I may not be seeing, or that will stimulate some thought for me. The last book I added to my shelf that I use in my study is a book that you may be familiar with if you listen to Greg Koukl. It’s J.P. Moreland and William Lane Craig’s, Philosophical Foundations for a Christian Worldview published in 2003. I can tell you, as soon as it came out, I grabbed it, and I have used it in an incredible way. It’s been very helpful for me. Finally, I bought the PC Study Bible. There are also other brands of Bible study software , but this one has a number of Bibles, concordances, cross-references, commentary sets, dictionaries, encyclopedias, word reference books, Greek and Hebrew sources, in addition to all kinds of systematic theologies. I couldn’t even read to you the entire list. Logos is another great Bible software resource. And for phone apps, there are resources from Olive Tree. For those of you who don’t have those kinds of there are a few helpful Internet sites that may be good references for you. Two other websites are BibleGateway.com and BibleStudyTools.com. These have a searchable Bible with many translations. There are a number of commentaries, Greek and Hebrew, and other tools. There are also Christian history sites like CCEL.org.
As you begin to study on your own, here are a few tips:
First, start collecting resources
Everything that I started with, I purchased for pennies at my local library used bookstore or online bookstores like Amazon who link to small book retailers. It’s amazing how many resources are available. Start collecting and start creating your own library.
Second, think about the value of focusing on time, not distance
When I run each day, I don’t worry about how far I run, I worry about how much time I spend running. I make a goal to run for an hour. If that ends up being a certain distance or a greater distance, it doesn’t really concern me. What is important to me is to get the cardiovascular effort of running for that hour. Don’t worry about how slow you’re moving through Scripture. Be more concerned about the amount of time and effort you’re spending in Scripture, and be dedicated and disciplined.
Third, be patient with your own growth
One thing you learn working in apologetics, like I have for the last six years, is that there’s more and more that I don’t know. I often get impatient with my inability to get to the truth of everything. For me, it’s about disciplining myself to be patient. Slow and consistent gets it done.
Finally, write
When I challenged myself to write and defend my positions in writing, I grew in ways that I couldn’t imagine I would. Journal. Start a blog. Write these things out. It’s that process of writing that seals the deal.
So there are some tips tools, and basic principles I hope will help you to become a better Christian case-maker.



Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Bible Study - Methodology, Theology, & Application



Here are the six lessons I highlighted for Bible reading.

1. The Bible argues.

It gives reasons or arguments for what it teaches. That was transformative in my life when I was 22 years old, to discover that the Bible is not a string of pearls, but a chain of linked thoughts. That makes a big difference for how we read.

2. A Bible’s unit of thought (or passage) has a main point.

Each unit of thought (or passage) in the Bible has a main point. That means everything else in the unit supports that point. It’s true of the Bible, and it’s true of this article. Look for the main point in everything you read.

3. To truly understand a passage we must figure out how the arguments support the main point.

Figuring out how arguments support the main point is what it means to understand a passage or a text. After we have identified a passage’s main point and located the author’s arguments for that main point, we have to do the harder work of understanding the connections. How does each supporting point prove the main point?

4. Jesus assumes that truth affects our emotions.

Jesus assumes that truth — reasons, arguments, facts — affects or influences the emotions. Anxiety is an emotion. It is not a decision. We don’t decide to get anxious. It happens to us. Jesus attacks anxiety in Matthew 6 with truth, with facts, promises, and reasons.

Therefore, he must believe that his word given to our souls will have an emotional, even physical, effect. There are dozens and dozens of commands to the emotions in the Bible, and along with them there are truths to bring about what is commanded.

5. Truth affects our emotions when it is believed.

Some will say, “Well, that doesn’t work for me. When I hear truth, it doesn’t have an emotional effect on me. It doesn’t take away my anxiety.” It works where the truths are believed and trusted — where there is faith.

If the Bible’s arguments are not having an effect on you, it’s because you have little faith in what it says. Faith is massively important here. We must trust. We must believe what Jesus says.

6. Pray for faith and meditate on his truth.

Therefore, pray for faith in the truth — in the passage’s main point with all of its supporting points — and meditate on that truth, because faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of Christ (Romans 10:17).

Father, grant us wisdom with regard to method. We want to handle your word rightly, think about how to read it rightly, and we want to be free from anxiety to honor our heavenly Father, who knows us and all of our needs, and who will meet them according to your promise. I ask this in Jesus’s name, Amen.

Reprinted from: http://www.desiringgod.org/articles/read-the-bible-to-your-anxiety


Thursday, April 30, 2015

4 Components to Bible Study

Receptivity: “The One Who Trembles at My Word”

On one occasion, while Jesus was speaking a message about the essential nature of the kingdom of God, he concluded with these cryptic words: “He who has ears to hear, let him hear” (Mark 4:9). He said essentially the same thing as well to his churches in Revelation 2-3. He also complained that Israel had turned a deaf ear to his claims and ministry (Matt 13:15). As fallen people with a bent for evil we do not naturally listen well, in spite of the fact that we have been given two ears. We are even worse when we are asked to listen to a message which indicts us for sin, even if it offers restitution after repentance. We must humble ourselves deeply and thoroughly if we are ever to really experience the life transforming presence of God through his word. WE must be receptive to his message.

Reading: “By Reading You May Have Insight”

In his letter to the Ephesians Paul encourages the churches to read what he has written so that “through reading they might understand his insight into the mystery of Christ” (3:4). The inference I wish to draw from this text is that the Bible is a book and as such must be read. While we must have a vital relationship with God through Christ to understand it properly, poor reading skills will hinder our comprehension of what God is saying. We should, as Christians and committed to Holy Scripture, develop our reading skills. The literacy rate among North Americans is woefully low, to say nothing of the paucity of good readers.

Reflection: “And The Lord Will Give You Insight”

The key to transformation is meditation which means prolonged reflection on a passage(s) or truth in order to penetrate its meaning, relating it to other doctrines and life, and hearing God’s voice in it. Meditation is the bridge to meaningful obedience. Paul told Timothy to think seriously about what he [Paul] said and that the Lord would give him insight into it (2 Tim 2:7). Unfortunately, just about everything in our driven society mitigates against investing time in prayerful meditation. Nevertheless, God commanded Joshua to meditate on his word so that he could obey it and enjoy the blessing of success (Joshua 1:8).

Relating: The “So What” Question

The issue is really one of blessing. The Bible was meant to be lived not just “figured out.” We must relate what we have learned—what the Lord has spoken to us about in meditation—to our lives and the lives of others. As James says, “Do not merely listen to the word and so deceive yourselves, do what it says” (James 1:22).

Reprinted from: https://bible.org/seriespage/principles-bible-study-four-key-components


Tuesday, April 28, 2015

How Do You Read The Bible?

You may have read your Bible for years or it may be something you’ve never done.  No matter your experience, there are ways to get the most out of the time you’re investing in Bible reading.  So, what is the best way to get the most out of reading your Bible?

Rightly Handle It
·         2 Timothy 2:15
Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth
·         Use a method
o   Pray, Observe, Interpret, Apply
§  Lean on the counselor (the Holy Spirit)
§  “What does the text say?”, “What does the text mean?”, “What should I do about this text?”
·         Understand the context
o   Matthew 18:20
For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I among them
§  So God isn’t there when you pray or the Holy Spirit isn’t God?
§  This is about church discipline
o   Read the passage, not the verse
o      ** Causes weak minds to be confused...example of cults **
·         Dig deeper
o   Get a study bible
o   Lean on Google, tag Bible
o   Great commentary resources on biblehub.org



Tuesday, April 7, 2015

New Testament Survey

New Testament literally means ‘New Covenant’, which replaced the old covenant.  The New Testament begins with the Gospels & the history of Jesus & goes through the most important things we need to know to live the Christian life

The Gospels
·         Jesus was crucified & rose in three days
·         He stayed on earth for 40 days after His resurrection
o   He appeared to 100s of people
§  To demonstrate to His followers that He truly was alive
o   He walked the Earth is a ‘Spirit’ body
§  He ate & could be touched
·         Doubting Thomas
§  He walked through walls
§  This is a window to our perfected bodies
·         This radically changed the disciples
o   10 of 11 died as martyrs
§  Andrew: Martyrdom by crucifixion (bound, not nailed, to a cross)
§  Bartholomew (Often identified with Nathaniel in the New Testament): Martyrdom by being either 1. Beheaded, or 2. Flayed alive and crucified, head downward.
§  James the Greater: Martyrdom by being beheaded or stabbed with a sword
§  James the Lesser: Martyrdom by being thrown from a pinnacle of the Temple at Jerusalem , then stoned and beaten with clubs
§  John: Died of old age, but was boiled alive & sent to Patmos
§  Jude (Often identified with Thaddeus in the New Testament): Martyrdom by being beaten to death with a club.
§  Matthew: Martyrdom by being burned, stoned, or beheaded
§  Peter: Martyrdom by crucifixion at Rome with his head downwards
§  Philip: Martyrdom
§  Simon: Martyrdom by crucifixion or being sawn in half.
§  Thomas: Martyrdom by being stabbed with a spear
Acts & Paul
·         Acts
o   Jesus ascended & Peter preached
§  Led the conversion of 3000 at Pentecost
·         Feast 50 days after Passover
§  Many signs & wonders
o   The first Christian church is described
§  “And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved” (2:47)
§  Roman & Jewish persecution
o   Stephen
§  Preached to the Sanhedrin
§  Was stoned to death by the Jews, led by Saul
o   The old covenant transition
§  The spirit living in believers
§  Peter and the unclean animals
·         Paul was Saul of Tarsus
o   He was a Pharisee and a son of a Pharisee (Acts 23:6)
§  A Hebrew of Hebrews of the tribe of Benjamin (Phil. 3:4-5)
o   He zealously persecuted the church
§  As a young Pharisee, he was present when Stephen was stoned and murdered (Acts 7:58-83)
§  He traveled with letters of arrest from the high priest and went to other cities to waste the church of Jesus Christ (Acts 26:10-11; Gal. 1:13)
§  It was on one of these missions that Saul was converted while on the road to Damascus.
o   Was also a Greek by culture
§  He was familiar with many of the sayings of classical and contemporary writers
§  Consequently, Paul was uniquely qualified to be the one chosen to carry the message of the gospel to the Gentiles
§  “I have become all things to all men, that I may by all means save some” (1 Cor. 9:22).
·         Conversion of Paul
o   While on the road to Damascus, Paul had an encounter with the glorified resurrected Christ
§  He had denied the Christian claim that Jesus was the Messiah, the Son of God
§  Further, he did not believe that He had risen from the dead
o   God blinded him with scales
§  He removed the scales when Paul realized Jesus was Christ
§  Thus, in the synagogues of Damascus, he proclaimed Christ as Savior
·         Paul spread the Gospel of Christ
o   Paul’s three missionary journeys (13:1–21:16)
o   His trials in Jerusalem and Caesarea (21:17–26:32)
o   His final journey to Rome (27:1–28:31)
o   Wrote 13 Epistles
§  Letters to the churches
§  Mainly instruction
§  Romans is a dense theological argument in favor of the Gospel of Christ
The Apostles & Revelations
·         Non-Pauline Epistles
o   More instruction by various authors
o   All walked with Jesus
·         Revelations
o   Says how it will end
o   God wins & the new heaven & new earth are created
·